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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 February 2010
Leopold Spinner a composer in a unique position. Can there be another living composer of comparable integrity, mastery and imagination who is so little known and so seldom performed? At the age of 68 he is, I believe, one of the outstanding composers of today; and yet those who have had only a cursory glance at his published scores seem to have dismissed them as mere imitations of his master, Webern. This view misses the point completely; nevertheless one can understand why cursory glances lead to such conclusions. To quote Spinner himself: …more important for me and much more difficult to comment upon is the ‘first and simplest answer’ which ‘leaps from the pages of my published scores’, namely that I revere Webern's music. Yes, this is quite true; I do, very much; and I don't see why it should be a gross impertinence to ask such a question, even if the answer does already leap from the pages of my scores. However, I also have the greatest admiration for the music of Mozart and Haydn, Bach, Beethoven and Schubert, Brahms, Schumann, Bruckner and Mahler, Schoenberg and Berg…. Might it not be that such more or less common characteristics [between related composers of the same period] are not only the expression of personal implications, but are also the reflection of fundamental historical considerations determining the evolution of purely musical concepts? I believe that if the true historic significance of Webern's music were better understood in all its aspects—for instance, the predominance and total engagement of motivic obligation as the structurally unifying factor in a complete fusion between traditional homphonic concepts and the strictest polyphonic presentation—then perhaps it might be possible to refer in factual terms to purely musical concepts and leave all reverence and admiration to take care of themselves.
page 2 note 1 ‘Twelve Questions for Leopold Spinner’ (TEMPO 99, May 1972). Spinner was born in 1906, of Austrian parents, in Lwów, Poland. He obtained a D.Phil at the University of Vienna, and then studied composition in Vienna: from 1926 to 1930 with Paul Pisk (a pupil first of Schreker and then of Schoenberg), and later, from 1935 to 1938, with Webern. In 1939 he settled in this country. A list of his compositions is appended to the interview.
page 8 note 1 Is it a coincidence that the Webern piece was called marcia funebre in the original version, a description later withdrawn with Spinner-like reticence; and that the present Concerto was composed just after Webern's tragic death?
page 10 note 1 A bass clef is missing in the right hand before bar 2 of page 7 and a treble clef is missing from the right hand in the penultimate bar of page 8.
page 10 note 2 Examples are on p. 5, bars 15/16; p. 8, in the last two lines (N.B. add treble clef in penultimate bar); and p. 11, in the first three lines.
page 13 note 1 Boosey & Hawkes, 1960.