Peace on Earth, op. 13 – (Arnold Schoenberg) Previous Next


Artist:

Date: 1907

Size: 25 x 34 cm

Museum: Arnold Schönberg Center (Vienna, Austria)

Technique: Music

As was first communicated by Egon Wellesz (Arnold Schönberg. Leipzig, Vienna, Zurich 1921) without specifying further details, both Peace on Earth, op. 13 and the Two Ballads, op. 12 were composed for competitions. Insights gained from Schönberg’s correspondence reveal that the composition prize for Peace on Earth is associated with the 1st Styrian Music Festival, which was motivated – according to press reports – by the success of the opera Salome by Richard Strauss in the previous year, and was scheduled for the second half of May 1907 as the highlight of the theater season. The fair copy of the choral setting, which presumably originated directly after the written copy was finished to serve as a manuscript for submission to the Styrian Music Festival competition. For the text of his choral work Schönberg drew upon a Christmas poem written by Conrad Ferdinand Meyer in October 1886. The Swiss poet would later allow Bertha von Suttner, to whose peace movement he was allied, to reprint Peace on Earth in her newspaper Die Waffen nieder (Lay Down Your Arms). The first verse of Meyer’s poem begins with the tidings of peace from the Christmas story; the second and third verses essay the history of the world after the birth of Christ as a time of war, in which, however, the belief in justice and the hope for peace continue to be upheld: a peace which in future generations becomes reality (fourth verse).

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