The Listening Service Extra 5 of 12 - Boiling Water
Schoenberg鈥檚 experience in the new atonal world...
Tom looks at Schoenberg鈥檚 own experience in the new atonal world that he entered, which Schoenberg likened to being dropped in boiling water.
鈥楶ersonally I had the feeling as if I had fallen into an ocean of boiling water, and not knowing how to swim or to get out in another manner, I tried with my legs and arms as best as I could. I do not know what saved me; why I was not drowned or cooked alive. I have perhaps only one merit: I never gave up! I had fallen into an ocean, into an ocean of overheated water and it burned not only my skin, it burned also internally. And I could not swim.
鈥t least: I could not swim with the tide, all I could do was to swim against the tide--whether it saved me or not鈥' - Arnold Schoenberg 1947
Archive audio and photos with kind permission of Arnold Sch枚nberg Center, Wien
Featured in...
12 ways of listening to Schoenberg's journey to serial music—The Listening Service
The Listening Service meets the Second Viennese School.
Why do we call it 'classical' music?
Tom Service poses a very simple question (with a not-so-simple answer).
Six of the world's most extreme voices
From babies to Mongolian throat singers: whose voice is the most extreme of all?
How did the number 12 revolutionise music?
Why are we all addicted to bass?
Watch the animations
Join Tom Service on a musical journey through beginnings, repetition and bass lines.
When does noise become music?
We like to think we can separate 鈥渘oise鈥 from 鈥渕usic鈥, but is it that simple?
Podcast
-
The Listening Service
An odyssey through the musical universe, presented by Tom Service