Schoenberg had made a return to tonal writing upon his move to America and, though the Violin Concerto uses twelve-tone technique, its neoclassical form demanded a mimesis of tonal melody, and hence a renunciation of the motivic technique used in his earlier work in favour of a thematic structure.[2] The basic row of the concerto is:
While the row is not necessary for understanding any good twelve-note piece, an awareness of it in this concerto is useful because the row is very much in the foreground, and is quite obviously abstracted from Schoenberg's concrete melodic-thematic thinking.[3]
It is in a three movement fast–slow–fast form, traditional for concertos:
Poco allegro—Vivace. Opinion is divided about the form of the first movement. According to one authority, it is in sonata form,[3] while another asserts it is a large ternary form, concluding with a cadenza and a coda.[4] It employs a wide variety of row forms, often in families associated by hexachordal content.[5]
Andante grazioso
Finale: Allegro. The last movement is a rondo with an unusually dynamic development. It only gradually becomes clear that the underlying character is that of a march. There is a second cadenza just before the end, which rounds off the whole work in cyclic fashion.[3]
The concerto was first published in 1939 by G. Schirmer.
Keller, Hans. 1961. "No Bridge to Nowhere: An Introduction to Stravinsky's Movements and Schoenberg's Violin Concerto". The Musical Times 102, no. 1417 (March): 156–58.
Mead, Andrew. 1985. "Large-Scale Strategy in Arnold Schoenberg's Twelve-Tone Music". Perspectives of New Music 24, no. 1 (Fall-Winter): 120–157.
Rosen, Charles. 1996. Arnold Schoenberg, with a new preface. Chicago and London: The University of Chicago Press. ISBN0-226-72643-6.
Further reading
Earle, Ben. 2003. "Taste, Power, and Trying to Understand Op. 36: British Attempts to Popularize Schoenberg". Music & Letters 84, no. 4 (November): 608–43.
Hall, Anne C. 1975. "A Comparison of Manuscript and Printed Scores of Schoenberg's Violin Concerto". Perspectives of New Music 14, no. 1 (Autumn-Winter, 1975): 182–196.
Wilker, Ulrich. 2015. "Aus der Neuen Welt. Tradition und Innovation in Schönbergs Concerto for Violin and Orchestra op. 36". Journal of the Arnold Schönberg Center 12 (2015): 105–121.