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・ Four Sided Triangle
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Four Orchestral Songs
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・ Four Pieces for String Quartet (Mendelssohn)


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Four Orchestral Songs : ウィキペディア英語版
Four Orchestral Songs
''Four Orchestral Songs'', Op. 22 (in German: Vier Lieder für Gesang und Orchester or Vier Orchesterlieder) is a composition by Austrian composer Arnold Schoenberg, scored for soprano and large orchestra.
== Composition ==

The songs were composed separately, even though they were published as a set. The first song was finished in October 6, 1913; the second one was composed between November 30 and December 3, 1914; the third one was composed between December 3, 1914, and January 1, 1915; and, after a hiatus, the fourth one was composed between July 19 and 28, 1916.〔(【引用サイトリンク】songs for voice and orchestra ) op. 22">url=http://www.schoenberg.at/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=191&Itemid=366&lang=en )〕 These songs were the last works that Schoenberg was to write in the freely atonal style. After finishing this composition, Schoenberg would complete no new works for seven years, when he composed the ''Five Piano Pieces, Op. 23''. During this compositional hiatus, he would develop the twelve-tone technique; thereafter, he would compose mainly (though not exclusively) using the twelve-note method. It was premiered in February 21, 1932, in Frankfurt am Main, conducted by Hans Rosbaud with soprano Hertha Reinecke. The second movement was dedicated to student and fellow composer Anton Webern. It was eventually published by Universal Edition in Vienna, in November 7, 1917.〔

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