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Krenek: Chamber Music & Songs, Vol. 1

73.9K streams

73,923

Krenek: Complete Piano Concertos, Vol....

43.3K streams

43,302

Lamentatio Jeremiae Prophetae

37.8K streams

37,833

Krenek: Chamber Music for Strings

37.5K streams

37,501

Krenek: Choral Works

29.7K streams

29,713

Krenek, E.: Diktator (Der) / Schwergew...

22.3K streams

22,321

Krenek, E.: Diktator (Der) / Schwergew...

16.3K streams

16,314

Krenek, E.: String Quartets Nos. 1 and...

16K streams

15,982

Krenek, E.: Piano Works - 12 Variation...

11.3K streams

11,328

Krenek: Chamber Music for Strings

9.4K streams

9,391

Biography

A study of Viennese-born composer Ernst Krenek's prodigious output is rather like a study of 20th century music in microcosm. Krenek moved with ease through the various aesthetic and stylistic changes that marked that turbulent century, taking what he considered the best features of each and fusing them into a new language all his own. Born in August 1900, Krenek began musical training at the age of six, and later studied privately with Franz Schreker in Vienna before enrolling for formal training with the same at the Berlin Conservatory in 1920. Krenek's music of the early '20s (including the Symphony No. 1 from 1921 and the first two string quartets) is chromatically charged and rather angst-ridden; however, a 1924 trip to France, during which he was exposed to the more utilitarian, entertaining aspects of Parisian music (and Stravinsky's Neo-Classicism in particular), encouraged Krenek to explore a more accessible style. In 1927 the opera Jonny spielt auf, which fuses jazz idioms to Krenek's own brand of tonality, made him a household name; the work was such a popular success that it eventually received performances in over a hundred cities in 18 different languages. From 1925 to 1927, Krenek lived in Kassel and Wiesbaden, serving as assistant manager of those city's operas. After returning to Vienna in 1928, he began questioning his own musical aesthetic, and, upon meeting Alban Berg and Anton Webern, made a serious study of the Second Viennese School's 12-tone techniques. By 1931, when Krenek began composing the opera Karl V (in celebration of the unifying virtues of Catholicism, as opposed to the degeneration of Germanic society in the 1930s), he was convinced of the merits of serial composition; the opera stands as his first thoroughly dodecaphonic work. Nazi officials were not oblivious to the political subtext of the opera, and the planned 1934 Vienna premiere of the work was canceled by the authorities. Krenek visited the United States in 1937, and when Hitler invaded Poland, Krenek was expelled from Austria and moved across the Atlantic permanently. Krenek divided the remainder of his life between active composition (he remained prolific until his death in 1991) and teaching duties (first at Vassar College in New York, and later at Hamline University in Minneapolis and as guest professor/lecturer at many other American institutions). Krenek was an American citizen from 1945 on. In the 1950s and 1960s, he began to explore electronic composition (e.g., Spiritus Intelligentiae Sanctus for voices and electronic sounds in 1956), and also aleatoric (chance) music (e.g., the 1957 work Sestina). During the last decades of his life, he scrupulously avoided all compositional "trends" and "systems," choosing instead to rely on his own musical wits. In 1992, one year after his death, Krenek's remains were transferred to the city of Vienna, where in later years he came to be honored as befits a musician of his stature. ~ Blair Johnston, Rovi