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...Wondrous Ladder. The fierce critical dispute last week concerned the work of the late Arnold Schoenberg, a Viennese composer whose atonal music still stirs controversy ten years after his death. This time the argument started at Vienna's famed Konzerthaus after the world première of a little-remembered Schoenberg work-a fragmentary, 45-minute oratorio, Jacob's Ladder. Schoenberg wrote the text for his oratorio in 1915, started to write the music but was interrupted by World War I service in the Austrian army. He abandoned the score for more than 20 years, returned...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Schoenberg Revisited | 6/30/1961 | See Source »

...oratorio is based on the Biblical story of Jacob's dream of a wondrous ladder on which angels moved between heaven and earth. In Schoenberg's vision, the bottom of the ladder is occupied by earthbound souls-the cowards, skeptics, cynics, journalists and unclean ones. The top of the ladder is filled with geniuses, gods and angels. The ascending and descending figures represented for Schoenberg the reincarnation that keeps human events in motion. The Ladder's lesson: "Learn to pray: he who prays is become one with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Schoenberg Revisited | 6/30/1961 | See Source »

Heavenly Ascent. Last week's audience was attentive, respectful, but clearly puzzled by both text and music. Showing signs of Schoenberg's restless groping for a new musical language, Jacob's Ladder called for a chamber chorus, two choirs, and the 100-man Cologne Radio Symphony under Czech Conductor Rafael Kubelik. Spotted about the hall were speakers through which-in accordance with a marginal note made by Schoenberg in 1944-the distant, taped sounds of two orchestras and a choir were heard. Although there were occasional moments of sustained melody, Jacob's Ladder...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Schoenberg Revisited | 6/30/1961 | See Source »

Noting the mixed reception Jacob's Ladder received, one critic regretted that Vienna had done "so little for her great son and also does so little for him today." But Gertrude Schoenberg, who attended the performance, seemed content. Asked if she thought her husband still needed to be defended, she replied: "Any man who protests against Schoenberg today is opposing an art form which is already historically anchored; he only makes himself ridiculous...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Music: Schoenberg Revisited | 6/30/1961 | See Source »

After changing storm windows, Nathan C. Foote '62 left a ladder leaning up against the local house where he was working. Later, the house caught fire. When, through Foote's mistake, people on the second floor were able to escape safely, the Boston Record highlighted Foote as a hero...

Author: By Peter S. Britell, | Title: Only a Few Undergraduates Manage to Break Student-City Barriers | 6/15/1961 | See Source »

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