Lyric Suite (Berg)
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The ''Lyric Suite'' is a six- movement work for string quartet written by Alban Berg between 1925 and 1926 using methods derived from Arnold Schoenberg's
twelve-tone technique The twelve-tone technique—also known as dodecaphony, twelve-tone serialism, and (in British usage) twelve-note composition—is a method of musical composition first devised by Austrian composer Josef Matthias Hauer, who published his "law o ...
. Though publicly dedicated to
Alexander von Zemlinsky Alexander Zemlinsky or Alexander von Zemlinsky (14 October 1871 – 15 March 1942) was an Austrian composer, conductor, and teacher. Biography Early life Zemlinsky was born in Vienna to a highly diverse family. Zemlinsky's grandfather, Anton S ...
(from whose '' Lyric Symphony'' it quotes), the work has been shown to possess a "secret dedication" and to outline a "secret programme". Berg arranged three of the "pieces" (movements) for string orchestra in 1928.


Composition and analysis

The string quartet has six movements: As Berg's friend and fellow Schoenberg pupil
Erwin Stein Erwin Stein (7 November 188519 July 1958) was an Austrian musician and writer, prominent as a pupil and friend of Schoenberg, with whom he studied between 1906 and 1910.
wrote in the preface to the score, " e work (Ist and VIth part, the main part of the IIIrd and the middle section of the Vth) has been mostly written strictly in accordance with Schoenberg's technique of the ' Composition with 12 inwardly related tones." A set of 12 different tones gives the rough material of the composition, and the portions which have been treated more freely still adhere more or less to the technique".
George Perle George Perle (6 May 1915 – 23 January 2009) was an American composer and music theorist. As a composer, his music was largely atonal, using methods similar to the twelve-tone technique of the Second Viennese School. This serialist style, and ...
points out that the first movement is not strictly twelve-tone, with the opening four chords being derived not from the series but from the interval-7 cycle. The first analysis was undertaken by H. F. Redlich, who notices that "the first movement of the ''Lyric Suite'' develops out of the disorder of
intervals Interval may refer to: Mathematics and physics * Interval (mathematics), a range of numbers ** Partially ordered set#Intervals, its generalization from numbers to arbitrary partially ordered sets * A statistical level of measurement * Interval e ...
in its first bar, the notes of which, strung out horizontally, present the complete
chromatic scale The chromatic scale (or twelve-tone scale) is a set of twelve pitches (more completely, pitch classes) used in tonal music, with notes separated by the interval of a semitone. Chromatic instruments, such as the piano, are made to produce th ...
, and from this in the second and following bars, grows the Basic Set in its thematic shape".
Theodor W. Adorno Theodor W. Adorno ( , ; born Theodor Ludwig Wiesengrund; 11 September 1903 – 6 August 1969) was a German philosopher, sociologist, psychologist, musicologist, and composer. He was a leading member of the Frankfurt School of criti ...
called the quartet "a latent opera". Redlich described "the concealed vocality of the ''Lyric Suite''" despite having no knowledge of the setting of Baudelaire's ''De profundis clamavi'' in the finale movement, deciphered by Douglass M. Green from what Perle calls "Berg's cryptic notations". Perle discovered a complete copy of the first edition annotated by Berg for his dedicatee, Hanna Fuchs-Robettin (
Franz Werfel Franz Viktor Werfel (; 10 September 1890 – 26 August 1945) was an Austrian- Bohemian novelist, playwright, and poet whose career spanned World War I, the Interwar period, and World War II. He is primarily known as the author of ''The For ...
's sister, with whom Berg had an affair in the 1920s), later that year. Berg used the
signature A signature (; from la, signare, "to sign") is a handwritten (and often stylized) depiction of someone's name, nickname, or even a simple "X" or other mark that a person writes on documents as a proof of identity and intent. The writer of a ...
motif (music), motif, A (musical note), A-B♭ (musical note), B-B (musical note), H-F (musical note), F (in German notation, B means B, while H means B), to combine Alban Berg (A. B.) and Hanna Fuchs-Robettin (H. F.). This is most prominent in the third movement. Berg also quotes a melody from Zemlinsky's ''Lyric Symphony'' in movement four which originally set the words "You are mine own". In the last movement, according to Berg's self-analysis, the "entire material, the tonal element too... as well as the Tristan motif" is developed "by strict adherence to the 12-note series".


I. Allegretto giovale

According to René Leibowitz, the first movement is "entirely written in the
twelve-tone technique The twelve-tone technique—also known as dodecaphony, twelve-tone serialism, and (in British usage) twelve-note composition—is a method of musical composition first devised by Austrian composer Josef Matthias Hauer, who published his "law o ...
, [it] is a sonata form, sonata movement without the Musical development, development. Thus the recapitulation (music), recapitulation follows directly upon the Exposition (music), exposition; but, because of the highly advanced twelve-tone technique of Variation (music), variation, ''everything'' in this movement is developmental". The tone row of the first movement is : : Pople adds a bar line to group the first and the last six pitches. He also depicts it as: : : Whenever a given row-form is immediately repeated, a reversed coupling of the hexachords is employed to produce a secondary set. Berg had used the row previously, in 1925, in his first twelve-tone work, his second setting of "Schliesse mir die Augen beide".


III. Allegro misterioso – Trio estatico

In the third movement, the outer sections of the ''Allegro misterioso'' present the same music forwards and then retrograde (music), backwards, while the ''Trio estatico'', the B section of the ternary form, ABA, is through-composed. Berg generates a characteristic rhythmic cell through partitioning the series into a seven-note chromatic segment and a complementary five-note Motif (music), motive from the remaining notes. According to Wolfgang Martin Stroh, the tone row of the third movement is : which can be partitioned into a rising chromatic segment and remaining pitches: : George Perle, gives : Despite assertions by Berg and others, George Perle, however, "had not yet been informed, as Leibowitz and Redlich were by the time they came to write their respective books, that everything in the 'strictly' dodecaphonic first movement had to be derived from a single serial ordering of the twelve notes of the chromatic scale." Rather, he, "recognized that the first three chords unfold tetrachordal segments of a single statement of the circle of fifths, cycle of fifths (interval cycle, C7), and that at the bottom of the same page, in bars 7–9, the cello presents a linear statement of the same cycle." The second violin unfolds "the initial tetrachordal segmentation of the perfect-5th cycle," again at the beginning of the recapitulation. He asks: "How could one [think] of the initial bar as 'disordered'? If anything is to be designated as an ''Urform'' here, surely it is this perfect-5th cycle, given its background role in relation to the tone row and other components of the movement."


VI. Largo desolato

In the sixth movement, tone row 1 is : : while tone row 2, derived from tone row 1, is : :


Version for string orchestra

In 1928, Berg arranged the second, third and fourth movements of the ''Lyric Suite'' for string orchestra. According to Adorno:


Recordings

The piece has been recorded by and released on: * Felix Galimir, Galimir Quartet (ca. 1935). ''Alban Berg, Suite Lyrique pour quatuor à cordes''. 4-disc, 78-rpm set. Polydor 595.135 (disc 1); Polydor 595.136 (disc 2); Polydor 595.137 (disc 3); Polydor 595.138 (disc 4). Reissued Chicago, 1937: Brunswick Polydor BP-2 (95006, 95007, 95008, 95009). Reissued 1991 as part of a compilation, ''Récital du Quatuor Galimir'', with Maurice Ravel, String Quartet in F major; Darius Milhaud, String Quartets No. 7, op. 87. Cassette tape recording. 15. This compilation reissued 1999 as ''The Galimir Quartet of Vienna: The Polydor Recordings, 1934–35''. CD recording. New York, NY: Rockport Records, RR5007. ''Lyric Suite'' reissued in 1991 in another compilation, ''Webern conducts Berg'', with Berg's Violin Concerto (Louis Krasner, violin, BBC Symphony Orchestra, cond. Anton Webern). [London]: Continuum, SBT 1004. * Felix Galimir, Galimir Quartet (1983). ''Alban Berg Lyric Suite 1926; String Quartet, op. 3''. LP recording. Vanguard VA-25017. Cassette recording. Vanguard CVA-25017. * Pro Arte Quartet (ca. 1960). ''Alban Berg: Lyric Suite''. 12-inch LP recording. Dial 5. * LaSalle Quartet (1958). Issued in 1996 on CD2 of 12-CD set, ''75 Jahre Donaueschinger Musiktage 1921–1996''. Col Legno WWE 12CD 31899. * LaSalle Quartet (1972). ''Arnold Schoenberg, Alban Berg, Anton Webern: Die Streichquartette''. 5-LP set. Deutsche Grammophon 2720 029 (2561 050 – 2561 054). Single-disc reissue as ''Alban Berg: Lyrische Suite für Streichquartett; Streichquartett, op. 3''. 12-inch LP recording. Deutsche Grammophon 2530 283. * LaSalle Quartet (1987) ''Neue Wiener Schule: Schoenberg, Berg, Webern Streichquartette''. 4-CD set. Deutsche Grammophon 419 994-2 (419 995-2; 419 996-2; 419 997-2; 419 998-2). * Arditti Quartet (1989 recording, 1994 release, 2000 reissue) ''Arditti Quartet Edition, Volume 1: Alban Berg''. Naïve Montaigne MO 782119 * Juilliard String Quartet (1950). ''Alban Berg: Lyric Suite''. 10-inch LP. Columbia ML 2148. Reissued as part of ''Arnold Schoenberg, Complete string Quartets'', with Alban Berg, ''Lyric Suite''; Anton Webern, ''Fünf Sätze für Streichquartett'', op. 5. 3-CD set. [France?]: United Archives * Ramor Quartet (1961). ''Alban Berg. Lyric Suite; Arnold Schoenberg: Verklärte Nacht''. With Edith Lorincz (viola) and Zsolt Deaky (violoncello) in the Schoenberg. Music of Five Centuries. 12-inch LP recording. Vox DL 530. ''Lyric Suite'' reissued 1965 as part of: ''Alban Berg: Lyric Suite and String Quartet, op. 3'', with the Kohon Quartet in op. 3. 12-inch LP recording. Turnabout TV 34021S. * Juilliard String Quartet (1961). ''Alban Berg: Lyric Suite; Anton Webern: Fünf Sätze''. 12-inch LP recording. RCA Victor LM 2531 (mono); LSC 2531 (stereo). ''Lyric Suite'' reissued in 2005 (together with Elliott Carter, Quartet No. 2, and William Schuman, Quartet No. 3) on CD as: ''Juilliard String Quartet plays Berg, Carter, Schuman''. Testament SBT 1374. * Juilliard String Quartet (1970). ''Ludwig van Beethoven, Quartetto op. 135; Alban Berg, Suite lirica''. Recorded by Radiotelevisione della Svizzera Italiana, Ascona, Switzerland on 24 August 1970. Issued on CD in 1995, Ermitage ERM 160–2. Reissued on Aura Music AUR 167–2. * Juilliard String Quartet (1996). ''Intimate Letters''. Sony Classical SK 66840 * Alban Berg Quartett (1974). ''Alban Berg. Streichquartett, op. 3 (1910); Lyrische Suite: (1925/26)''. 12-inch LP recording. Telefunken 6.41301; Telefunken SAT 22 549. * (1990). Karl Weigl: Streichquartett A-Dur, Op. 4; Alban Berg: Lyrische Suite. CD recording. Orfeo C 216 901 A * Ludwig Quartet (1991). Alban Berg: Suite lyrique; Henri Dutilleux: Ainsi la nuit; Anton Webern: Langsamer Satz. CD recording. Timpani 1C1005. * Vogler Quartet (1991). Alban Berg: Lyric Suite; Giuseppe Verdi: String Quartet in E minor. CD recording. RCA Victor Red Seal 09026-60855-2. * Pražák Quartet and Vanda Tabery (1993). ''Arnold Schoenberg: String Quartet No. 1 in D minor, op. 7; Alban Berg: Lyric Suite''. Praga PR 250 034. ''Lyric Suite'' reissued 2000, as part of ''Alban Berg: Quartet Op. 3, Lyric Suite...''. Prajac Digital. * Duke Quartet (1997). ''Alban Berg: Lyric Suite; Arnold Schoenberg: Verklärte Nacht''. With Helen Kamminga (viola) and Sophie Harris (cello) in the Schoenberg. Collins Classics 15062. * Leipzig String Quartet (2000). ''Alban Berg, Anton Webern: Complete String Quartets''. Andreas Seidel, Tilman Büning (violins), Ivo Bauer (viola), Matthias Moosdorf (violoncello), Christiane Oelze (soprano). CD recording. MDG 307 0996-2. * Kronos Quartet & Dawn Upshaw (2003). ''Berg: Lyric Suite''. Nonesuch 79696-2. * Schoenberg Quartet (2001). ''Alban Berg: Chamber Music, Complete''. Chandos Records CHAN 9999. * Oslo String Quartet (2003). ''Oslo String Quartet Plays Jean Sibelius, Hugo Wolf, Alban Berg''. Geir Inge Lotsberg, Per Kristian Skalstad (violins), Are Sandbakken (viola), Øystein Sonstad (violoncello). CD recording. CPO 999 977-2. * New Zealand String Quartet (2007). ''Alban Berg, String Quartet, op. 3, Lyric Suite; Hugo Wolf: Italienische Serenade''. CD recording. Naxos 8.557374. * Diotima Quartet (2010). Schoenberg, Webern, Berg. Arnold Schoenberg: String Quartet No. 2 in F-sharp Minor, op. 10, with soprano. Anton Webern: 6 bagatelles, op. 9, including an unpublished bagatelle Langsam: "Schmerz immer, Blick nach oben". Alban Berg: Lyric Suite, including Largo desolato: "De profundis clamavi" with voice, from a score annotated by Berg. With Sandrine Piau (soprano) and Marie-Nicole Lemieux (contralto). CD recording. Naïve V 5240. * Tetzlaff Quartet (2014). ''Mendelssohn Quartet Op. 13 – Berg Lyric Suite''. Christian Tetzlaff, Elisabeth Kufferath (violins), Hanna Weinmeister (viola), Tanja Tetzlaff (cello). CD recording. CAvi-music AVI8553266. * Gerhard Quartet (2017). ''Schumann – Berg – Kurtág''. Lluís Castán, Judit Bardolet Vilaró (violins), Miquel Jordà Saún (viola), Jesús Miralles Roger (cello). CD recording. Harmonia Mundi 916108DI.


References

Sources * * * * * * * * (cloth); (pbk). * * * *


Further reading

* Becker, Tim (2005). "Alban Bergs ''Lyrische Suite für Streichquartett''". In ''Plastizität und Bewegung'', 205–232. Berlin: Frank & Timme. . * George Perle, Perle, George (1977b). "Berg's Master Array of the interval cycle, Interval Cycles". ''The Musical Quarterly'' 63, no. 1 (January): 1–30. .. * Perle, George (2001). ''Style and Idea in the Lyric Suite of Alban Berg'', revised and enlarged edition. Hillsdale, New York: Pendragon Press. . * Erwin Stein, Stein, Erwin (1955). Prefatory notes to Alban Berg, ''Lyrische Suite für Streichquartett'' (score). Philharmonia no. 173; UE 8780. Vienna: Universal Edition. * Arnold Whittall, Whittall, Arnold (2008). ''The Cambridge Introduction to Serialism''. Cambridge Introductions to Music. New York: Cambridge University Press. (hardback) (pbk).


External links

* * David Schiff, Schiff, David (September 21, 2003)
"The Secret Love Affair Behind the ''Lyric Suite''"
''The New York Times''.
''Lyric Suite''
D1f.com.
''Lyric Suite''
for string orchestra, 3 pieces (Nr. 1, 5, 6) arr. Theo Verbey, Universal Edition. {{authority control Compositions by Alban Berg Compositions for string quartet Twelve-tone compositions Suites (music) 1926 compositions Orchestral suites Vocal musical compositions Musical settings of poems by Charles Baudelaire Composer tributes (classical music) Music dedicated to family or friends