His first major piece written in dodecaphonic serialism, it definitely falls under the category of Hard. |
|
The composer began as a Schoenberg disciple and produced a lovely piano concerto in the dodecaphonic style. |
|
The liner notes make a big deal of the fact that some of the music of the finale follows dodecaphonic practice. |
|
The fugue is a combination of typically Bach-style themes, modern melodies and dodecaphonic elements. |
|
They sounded as if they were playing an experimental jazz number or the latest dodecaphonic offering by Pierre Boulez. |
|
Of a tighter dodecaphonic character, this new piece is inspired by the rhythmic structures of Carnatic classical music. |
|
I studied the piece from a dodecaphonic, serial point of view, which yields some remarkable insights into the work, but I don't think such an exclusive adherence necessary. |
|
Fifty-five years after his death, Anton Webern still leads listeners through a musical underworld where even dodecaphonic and atonal rules simply don't apply. |
|
Perhaps music wasn't marching inexorably to dodecaphonic heaven after all. |
|
The soloist perfectly masters a very complex form that uses dodecaphonic processes and an extremely difficult finale, in fugue form and syncopated. |
|
For serial or dodecaphonic music, the resultant body consists in a system of compositions. |
|
Using the twelve tones of the chromatic scale, Schoenbergian serialism reveals itself to be also dodecaphonic, which is why we often associate the twelve tone technique with serialism. |
|
It should be added that Maurice Ohana is an atypical composer with a personal language that frees itself of all aesthetic, stylistic schools of thought, most notably the German dodecaphonic school. |
|
In 1936, he wrote his first dodecaphonic works. |
|
The piece initially has a dodecaphonic feel, although the pattern here is usually to hear 10 notes of the chromatic scale before a note is repeated. |
|