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Dieter Schnebel

Dieter Schnebel (14 March 1930 – 20 May 2018) was a German composer, theologian and musicologist. He composed orchestral music, chamber music, vocal music and stage works. From 1976 until his retirement in 1995, Schnebel served as professor of experimental music at the Hochschule der Künste, Berlin.

Dieter Schnebel

(1930-03-14)14 March 1930

Lahr, Baden, Germany

20 May 2018(2018-05-20) (aged 88)

Berlin, Germany
  • Composer
  • Theologian
  • Musicologist

Cycles and style[edit]

Schnebel composed several cycles of works, sometimes over a long time.[4] One of them was called Versuche (Essays), consisting of four works written 1953 to 1956. They concern serial techniques, exploring space by placing performers at separate positions. His religious music includes a cycle Für Stimmen (...missa est) (For voices ...), consisting of four works written 1956 to 1969). They use the human voice and organ in experimental settings of prayers and biblical texts. A cycle Produktionsprozesse is a group of compositions related to "language and body" which concerns the physical sound production, with the performers utilizing speech and breathing organs in unusual ways.[8][3]


His earliest works were strongly influenced by his fellow Darmstadt students Karlheinz Stockhausen, about whose early works he wrote an extended essay, and Mauricio Kagel, about whom he edited a book. Starting in 1959, he also came under the influence of John Cage.[9][10][3])


Schnebel made arrangements of works by Bach, Beethoven, Webern and Wagner, called Re-Visions, sometimes using their traditional concepts to reflect new techniques and different ways of looking at them.[3]

Awards[edit]

Schnebel's awards include the Arts Prize of Lahr in 1991. He received the first European Church Music Prize in Schwäbisch Gmünd the same year. He was a member of the Berlin Akademie der Künste from 1991, and of the Bayerische Akademie der Schönen Künste since 1996.[4] In 2015, he was awarded the Bundesverdienstkreuz am Bande.

Compositio (1955–56, rev. 1964/1965)

Orchestra / Symphonische Musik für mobile Musiker (1974–1977)

Canones (1975–1977; 1993/1994)

Schubert-Phantasie (Re-Visionen I5, for divided orchestra and voices) (1978, rev. 1989 as Blendwerk, for string orchestra)

Thanatos-Eros (Traditione III1), symphonic variations for large orchestra (1979–82, rev.1984–85)

Sinfonie-Stücke (Traditione III2) (1984–85)

Missa, Dahlem Mass for four solo voices, two mixed choirs, orchestra and organ (1984–1987)

[11]

Mahler-Moment, for strings (1985)

Sinfonie X (Tradition VI) (1987–1992; 2004/2005)

Mozart-Moment (1988/1989)

Schumann-Moment (Re-Visionen II2, for voices, winds, harp, and percussion (1989)

[2]

Verdi-Moment (Re-Visionen II5, for orchestra (1989)

[2]

St. Jago (Tradition IV2, 3 speakers, 4 singers, and ensemble: music and images to (1989–1991)[2] (rev. 1995)

Heinrich von Kleist

Janáček-Moment (Re-Visionen II1), for orchestra (1991)

[2]

Totentanz, ballet-oratorio for two speakers, soprano, bass, choir, orchestra and live electronic (1992–1994)

inter, for chamber orchestra (1994)

O Liebe! – süßer Tod..., five sacred songs after for mezzo-soprano, chamber choir, and small orchestra (1995)

Johann Sebastian Bach

Ekstasis for soprano, speaker, two children's voices, percussion, choir and large orchestra (1996/1997; 2001/2002)

Gligo, Nikša. "Schrift ist Musik? Ein Beitrag zur Aktualisierung eines nur anscheinend veralteten Widerspruchs". International Review of the Aesthetics and Sociology of Music 18 (1987), 1, pp. 145–162 (part 1); 19 (1988), 1, pp. 75–115 (part 2) (includes an analysis of Schnebel's project MO-NO: Musik zum Lesen)

Pöllmann, Rainer, and . "Zum Tod von Dieter Schnebel Ein radikaler Avantgardist". Deutschlandfunk Kultur (20 May 2018; accessed 25 May 2018). (in German)

Achim Freyer

Stolba, K. Marie. The Development of Western Music: A History. Boston: McGraw Hill, 1998.

Warnaby, John. "Dieter Schnebel and His Sinfonie X". , New Series, no. 186 (September 1993), pp. 26–31.

Tempo

Weiland, Andreas. "". Art in Society, No. 11 (Spring/Summer, 2011): .

KÖRPERSPRACHE. Eine Organkomposition von Dieter Schnebel, uraufgeführt in der Neuen Galerie in Aachen am 24. März 1986

Weiland, Andreas. "". Art in Society, No. 11 (Spring/Summer, 2011): .

Die Metamorphosen für Mezzosopran und kleines Orchester Dieter Schnebels, uraufgeführt in der Neuen Galerie in Aachen

in the German National Library catalogue

Literature by and about Dieter Schnebel

Schott Music

International Composers: Dieter Schnebel

(in French and English). IRCAM.

"Dieter Schnebel (biography, works, resources)"

discography at Discogs

Dieter Schnebel

hboscaiolo.blogspot.de 2016

Dieter Schnebel in der Hochschule für Musik und Darstellende Kunst (HfMDK) Frankfurt, 23. und 24.11. 2016 / Zwischen Nostalgie und Utopie

(archive from 20 February 2009, from the original), FLAC files made from high-quality LP transcriptions

Dieter Schnebel at the Avant Garde Project