Pierrot Lunaire Arnold Schoenberg - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Pierrot Lunaire Arnold Schoenberg

Description:

Pierrot Lunaire Arnold Schoenberg I. Moonstruck The wine that one drinks with the eyes The moon spills nights into the waves. And a spring flood overflows The still ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:271
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 189
Provided by: Patrici280
Learn more at: https://lunanova.org
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Pierrot Lunaire Arnold Schoenberg


1
(No Transcript)
2
Pierrot LunaireArnold Schoenberg
3
I. Moonstruck The wine that one drinks with the
eyesThe moon spills nights into the waves.
4
And a spring flood overflowsThe still horizon.
5
(No Transcript)
6
Desires, visible and sweetCountless swim across
the flood.
7
The wine that one drinks with the eyesThe moon
spills nights into the waves.
8
(No Transcript)
9
The poet, who practices devotionEnrapts himself
on the holy drink,
10
He turns against the sky ecstaticHeadlong
reeling sucks and slurps
11
The wine, that one drinks with the eyes.
12
(No Transcript)
13
II. Colombine Moonlights pale blossoms,The
white wonder-roses
14
Bloom in July evenings--O Id pluck just one.
15
(No Transcript)
16
To ease anxious sufferingI search on dark streams
17
Moonlights pale blossoms,The white wonder-roses.
18
(No Transcript)
19
All my longing would be stilledIf I might,
fabled, stalk
20
Slightly tipsy--strew petalsIn your brown hair
(of)
21
Moonlights pale blossoms.
22
(No Transcript)
23
III. The Dandy With one phantastical light
beamThe moon lights the crystal flaconsl
24
On the black, high holy washstandOf the silent
dandy from Bergamo.
25
In a resonant bronze basinThe fountain laughs
light, metal clangs
26
(No Transcript)
27
With one phantastical light beamThe moon lights
the crystal flaconsl
28
(No Transcript)
29
Pierrot of the waxen countenance Stands musing
and thinks how shall he make-up today
30
Shoves aside the rouge and the Orient greenAnd
paints his face--sublime style
31
With one phantastical moonbeam.
32
(No Transcript)
33
(No Transcript)
34
IV. A Faded Laundress A faded laundressWashes
nighttimes pale clothes
35
Naked, silver white armsShe stretches down into
the flood.
36
Through the clearing creeping windsSlightly
agitate the stream.
37
A faded laundressWashes nighttimes pale clothes.
38
And the calm maid of the skyBy twigs tenderly
flattered
39
Spreads across the dark meadowsHer light-woven
linen--
40
A faded laundress.
41
(No Transcript)
42
V. Valse de Chopin Like a pallid drop of
bloodColors a sick mans lips,
43
So reposes in these tonesA charm seeking
annihilation.
44
(No Transcript)
45
Wild airs accords disorderDespairs glacial
dream--
46
Like a pallid drop of bloodColors a sick mans
lips.
47
(No Transcript)
48
Hot and and jocund, sweet and tastyMelancholic
dusty waltzes,
49
Never come into my senses!Hasten me on my
conception
50
Like a pallid drop of blood.
51
(No Transcript)
52
VI. Madonna Rise, o mother of all sorrowsOn the
altar of my verses!
53
Blood from your meager breastsThe swords anger
has spilled.
54
Your eternally fresh woundsResemble eyes, red
and open.
55
Rise, o mother of all sorrowsOn the altar of my
verses!
56
(No Transcript)
57
In emaciated handsYou hold your sons corpse
58
To show to all mankind--But the gaze of men shuns
59
You, o mother of all sorrows.
60
(No Transcript)
61
VII. The Sick MoonYou nocturnal deathsick
moonthere on the skys black pillow,
62
Your gaze, gross with feverEnchants me like
alien melody.
63
(No Transcript)
64
On insatiable loves bodyYou die, of longing,
buried deep.
65
You nocturnal deathsick moonThere on the skys
black pillow.
66
The beloved, who in senses riotThoughtless
creeps to the beloved,
67
Is amused by your beams play--Your pale,
pain-borne blood,
68
You nocturnal deathsick moon.
69
(No Transcript)
70
(No Transcript)
71
VIII. Night Obscure, black giant mothsKilled
the suns splendour.
72
A closed book of spells,The horizon
settles--hushed.
73
From the mists of lost depthsWafts a
scent--remembrance murdered!
74
Obscure, black giant mothsKilled the suns
splendour.
75
(No Transcript)
76
And from the sky earthwardsSinking on heavy wings
77
Unseeable the monsters (glide)Down into the
human . . .
78
Obscure, black giant moths.
79
(No Transcript)
80
IX. Prayer to Pierrot Pierrot! My laughterIve
unlearned!
81
Splendours imageDispersed--dispersed!
82
Black the flag flapsAt me now from the mast.
83
Pierrot! My laughterIve unlearned!
84
Give me again,Vet of the soul,
85
Snowman of lyric,Highness of the moon,
86
Pierrot--my laughter!
87
(No Transcript)
88
X. Theft Red, princely rubies,Bloody drops of
old fame,
89
Sleep in the deads casketsBelow in the grave
vaults.
90
Nights, with his croniesPierrot descends--to rob
91
Red, princely rubiesBloody drops of old fame.
92
But there--their hair on endPale fear charms
them to the spot
93
Through the gloom--like eyes--Stare from the
deads caskets
94
Red, princely rubies.
95
(No Transcript)
96
XI. Red Mass For a terrible Last Supper,By the
murk gleam of gold,
97
By flickering candlelight,Near the
altar--Pierrot!
98
(No Transcript)
99
His hand, the annointed,Rips up the priests
vestments
100
For a terrible Last SupperBy the murk gleam of
gold.
101
With consecrated bearingHe shows the anxious
souls
102
The dripping red HostHis heart--in bloodied
fingers--
103
For a terrible Last Supper.
104
(No Transcript)
105
XII. Gallows Song The withered whoreWith
stringy neck
106
Will be his lastBeloved.
107
In his brainsStuck like a nail
108
The withered whoreWith stringy neck.
109
Slim, like the stonepine,On her neck a small
tuft--
110
Lustfully will shecircle the rogues neck,
111
The withered whole!
112
(No Transcript)
113
XIII. Beheading The moon, a shining scimitarOn
a black silk cushion,
114
Ghastly huge--it slices downThrough the pained
dark night.
115
(No Transcript)
116
Pierrot stumbles about with restAnd stares up in
fear of death
117
At the moon, a shining scimitarOn a black silk
cushion.
118
His knees chatter under him,Swooning he headlong
collapses.
119
He fancies he hears whizzing punitive downOn
his sinners neck slicing.
120
The moon, a shining scimitar.
121
(No Transcript)
122
XIV. The Crosses Holy crosses are the
versesThat the poet mutely bleeds for,
123
Stricken blind by the vultureFlapping swarm of
ghosts!
124
(No Transcript)
125
Swords gorged upon corpsesOn parade in blood
scarlet!
126
Holy crosses are the versesThat the poet mutely
bleeds for.
127
Dead the head--stiff the ringlets--Far the
scattered noise of rabble.
128
Slowly the sun sinks below,A red kings crown.--
129
Holy crosses are the verses!
130
(No Transcript)
131
XV. Homesick Sweetly plaintive--a crystal
sighingFrom an old Italian pantomime,
132
Tinkles over how Pierrots become soWooden, so
modern sentimental.
133
And it chimes through his hearts desert,Chimes
subdued through his senses again,
134
Sweetly plaintive--a crystal sighingFrom an old
Italian pantomime,
135
(No Transcript)
136
So Pierrot forgets the dream faces!By the moons
faint firelight,
137
By the light seas flood--longing straysBrave
upwards, up to the home sky
138
Sweetly plaintive--a crystal sighing.
139
(No Transcript)
140
XVI. Mean Trick! In Cassanders polished
skullWhile his cries shriek through the air!
141
Pierrot, the hypocrite, boresTenderly,--with a
trepan!
142
Then he tamps down with his thumbsHis genuine
Turkish tobacco
143
In Cassanders polish skullWhile his cries
shriek through the air!
144
Then he twists a perfumed cherry pipestemInto
the glossy baldspot
145
And comfortably smokes and puffs onHis genuine
Turkish tobacco
146
In Cassanders polished skull.
147
(No Transcript)
148
XVII. Parody Knitting needles, bright and
gleaming,In her gray hair,
149
The duenna sits muttering,There in a small red
dress.
150
She waits in the arbor,She loves Pierrot
painfully,
151
Knitting needles, bright and gleamingIn her gray
hair.
152
(No Transcript)
153
Then suddenly--hark!--a whisper!A wind breath
giggles softly
154
The moon, that nasty mockerApes her with his
rays--
155
Knitting needles, bright and gleaming.
156
(No Transcript)
157
XVIII. The Moonspot One white spot from the
bright moonOn the back of his black coat,
158
So Pierrot walks in mild eveningSearching for
luck and adventure.
159
Instantly hes troubled by something on his suit,
He looks himself over and finds sure enough--
160
One white spot from the bright moonOn the back
of his black coat.
161
Wait! He thinks thats a spot of plaster!Wipes
and wipes, but--cant get it out!
162
And so he goes, swollen with fury, farther,Rubs
and rubs until early morning--
163
One white spot from the bright moon.
164
(No Transcript)
165
XIX. Serenade With a grotesque giant bowPierrot
scrapes on his viola,
166
Like the stork on one leg,He dully plucks a
pizzicato.
167
Suddenly Cassander comes--frenziedBy the
nocturne virtuoso--
168
With a grotesque giant bowPierrot saws on his
viola.
169
Fast he throws down the violaWith his delicate
left hand
170
He grasps the bald head by the collar--Dreaming
he plays on the baldspot
171
With a grotesque giant bow.
172
(No Transcript)
173
XX. Journey Home The moonbeam is the rudder,A
water lily serves as boat
174
So Pierrot sails toward the southWith a fair
wind for his passage.
175
The stream hums deep scalesAnd rocks the light
dory.
176
The moonbeam is the rudder,A water lily serves
as boat.
177
To Bergamo, his homeland,Pierrot now returns
178
Weak gleams in the eastThe green horizon.
179
--The moonbeam is the rudder.
180
(No Transcript)
181
XXI. O Old Perfume Old perfume from fabled
times,Ravish again my senses!
182
A crazy swarm of vagariesBuzzes through the easy
air.
183
A happy impulse brings me toThose joys Ive long
looked down on
184
Old perfume from fabled times Ravish me again
185
All my ill humor I let slide,Out my sun-framed
window
186
I see the clear and lovely worldAnd dream beyond
for blissful stretches. . .
187
O Old perfume--from fabled times!
188
(No Transcript)
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com