Josef Matthias Hauer
Josef Matthias Hauer was an Austrian composer and music theorist. He is best known for developing, independent of and a year or two before Arnold Schoenberg, a method for composing with all 12 notes of the chromatic scale. Hauer was also an important early theorist of twelve-tone music and composition.
Hauer "detested all art that expressed ideas, programmes or feelings," instead believing that it was "essential...to raise music to its highest...level," a, "purely spiritual, supersensual music composed according to impersonal rules," and many of his compositions reflect this in their direct, often athematic, 'cerebral' approach. Hauer's music is diverse, however, and not all of it embraces this aesthetic position.
Life
Hauer was born in Wiener Neustadt and died in Vienna. He had an early musical training in cello, choral conducting, and organ, and claimed to have been self-taught in theory and composition. In 1918 he published his first work on music theory. In August 1919 he published his "law of the twelve tones", requiring that all twelve chromatic notes sound before any is repeated. This he developed and first articulated theoretically in Vom Wesen des Musikalischen, before the Schoenberg circle’s earliest writings on twelve-tone technique.Hauer wrote prolifically, both music and prose, until 1938, when his music was added to the touring Nazi "degenerate art" exhibit. He stayed in Austria through the war, and, in fear, published nothing. Even after the war, however, he published little more, although it is thought that several hundred pieces remain in manuscript. Hauer continued to write twelve-tone pieces while also teaching several students his techniques and philosophy. At the time of his death, Hauer had reportedly given away most of his possessions, living simply while retaining a copy of the I Ching.
Musical style
Hauer's compositional techniques are extraordinarily various and often change from one piece to the next. These range from building-block techniques to methods using a chord series that is generated out of the twelve-tone row to pieces employing an ordered row that is then subject to systematic permutation. The so-called 44 "tropes" and their compositional usage are essential to many of Hauer's twelve-tone techniques. In contrast to a twelve-tone row that contains a fixed succession of twelve tones, a trope consists of two complementary hexachords in which there is no fixed tone sequence. The tropes are used for structural and intervallic views on the twelve-tone system. Every trope offers certain symmetries that can be used by the composer. But Hauer also employed twelve-tone rows, using one row for a single piece and subjecting that row to a series of transformations, most notably rotation," and his often emphasized concept of tropes, or unordered arrangement of a pair of hexachords. This interpretation seems largely drawn from Hauer's theoretical writing of the early to mid-1920s in which he outlines these techniques. But a closer look at Hauer's compositional output reveals that a significant portion of his twelve-tone music from the 1920s and 1930s employs strictly ordered rows, as do the Zwölftonspiele that follow. Despite this, Hauer is often mentioned as the inventor of the tropes in contrast to Arnold Schoenberg and the Second Viennese School, who are thought of as advocates of Schoenberg's twelve-tone method.After 1940, Hauer wrote exclusively Zwölftonspiele, designated sometimes by number, sometimes by date. He wrote about one thousand such pieces, most of them lost. These pieces were all built on an ordered twelve-tone row, with the actual order often determined by chance. These pieces were not so much concert pieces as much as systematic and controlled meditations on the twelve tones—more a means than an end. Hauer believed that the twelve tempered tones provided access to the realm of the spiritual; meditating on the twelve tones was thus a prayerful act and not a public display of personal emotion or expression. In many ways Hauer's use of chance elements, and especially his deep interest in the I Ching, are parallel to those of American composer John Cage.
Musical works
576 works are known,amongst which are:- Apokalyptische Fantasie, Op. 5
- Nachklangstudien, Op. 16
- Nomos, Op. 19
- Atonale Musik, Op. 20
- Cantata Wandlungen, Op. 53 – Premiere conducted by Hermann Scherchen
- Violinkonzert mit Orchester in einem Satz, Op. 54 – Premiere conducted by Hermann Scherchen
- Klavierkonzert mit Orchester in einem Satz, Op. 55
- Opera Salambo, Op. 60, after Flaubert's Salammbô – Premiere conducted by Otto Klemperer
- Opera Die schwarze Spinne, Op. 62, after Jeremias Gotthelf's The Black Spider– Premiere conducted by Michael Gielen
- Various Hölderlin cantatas
- Cantata Der Menschen Weg, Op. 67, text: Hölderlin
- Fantasie für Klavier, Op. 39
- Emilie vor ihrem Brauttag Op. 58
- Charakterstücke für Salonorchester
- Zwölftonmusik für neun Soloinstrumente, Op. 73
- Frühling, Op. 76 for mixed choir, violins, cellos
- Zwölftonmusik für Orchester
- Zwölftonmusik für Orchester mit einer Zwölftonreihe, die in sechs verschiedenen Tropen steht
- Zwölftonspiel für fünf Violinen , dedicated to Hermann Heiß
- Zwölftonspiel für Klavier zu vier Händen
- Zwölftonspiel für Flöte, Fagott und Streichquatett
Theoretical writings
In his theoretical writing, Hauer often casts the twelve tempered tones as a kind of spiritual world. For Hauer, this twelve-tone world offers one access to the fundamental truths of existence, transforming composition from an act of personal expression into one of devotion and contemplation. His various twelve-tone techniques thus become a means to an end, as do the pieces themselves; the ultimate goal of music is to commune with the infinite. This mystical approach to music is drawn from 19th-century romanticism and is certainly not exclusive to Hauer, though he may have been the most publicly vocal proponent of this idea in the Vienna of his day. In fact, much of the thinking of the Second Viennese School is bound up with the idea that music provides access to spiritual truth, an idea adapted from the writing of Schopenhauer, who enjoyed considerable popularity at this time, especially among artists. Hauer often refers to the scientific writing of Goethe, which most likely came to him through the editions and commentary of Rudolf Steiner.
The most important writings:
- 17 theoretical writings, 33 essays and articles
- Über die Klangfarbe
- Vom Wesen des Musikalischen
- Deutung des Melos
- "Atonale Melodienlehre"
- Vom Melos zur Pauke
- Zwölftontechnik. Die Lehre von den Tropen
- "Der Goldene Schnitt. Eine Rechtfertigung der Zwölftonmusik"
- "Kosmisches Testament"