Arnold Schonberg was born on September 13, 1874 as a Jewish family in Vienna. With the help of the Austrian composer Alexander Zemlinski, he studied his own composition and in 1899 he invented his first important work, a tone poem for string quartet. VerklärteNacht (Transformation Night). In 1901, he married Zemlinsky 's sister, Mathilde, and gave birth to two children. The couple moved to Berlin, Schönberg had lived through the cabaret orchestra of planned opera and director for the past two years.
Arnold Schoenberg (1874-1981) is an Austrian composer. But he became a US citizen in 1941. He lived in Vienna until 1925. From 1925 to 1933 he taught at the Prussian Academy of Fine Arts in Berlin. Arnold Schönberg also taught at the Boston margin music school for one year. The twelve tones he invented were used to some extent by five piano pieces and serenade in 1923. He did not design continuous technology, but he thought it was an important organizational instrument in music. The twelve sounds he invented are also thought of as 12 sounds.
The protagonist of Thomas Mann's novel, Dr. Fostus (1947), Adrian Lefrken is a composer who uses twelve tone techniques similar to Arnold Schoenberg's innovation. Schönberg was not satisfied with this, and after the publication of the novel (E. R. Schoenberg 2018), these people exchanged letters. 1975. Style and Philosophy: Leonardo Stein, edited by Arnold Schonberg, Leo Black translated. New York: St. Martin's Press, London: Faber & Faber. ISBN 978-0-520-05294-9. It was expanded in the publication of the 1950 Philosophical Library (New York) edited by Dika Newlin (from page 559 of 231). Volume comes in two versions, "several papers ... originally written in German (translated by Dika Newlin)"