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Thursday, May 4, 1995
Home Edition
Section: Metro
Page: B-11

CULTURE WATCH; Local Dissonance;



Arnold Schoenberg was a great composer. The University of Southern
California is a great university. It can only distress admirers of both
that relations between the composer's heirs and the current
administration of the university have worsened to the point that the
heirs want to strip the campus of the priceless Schoenberg collection of
scores, manuscripts, tapes and memorabilia.

No new home has been selected, and the best universities may well be
reluctant to capitalize on another institution's mistakes or misfortune.
That fact has aroused fear on the part of the musical community that,
despite the family's assurances to the contrary, the superb collection
may yet be broken up or transferred to inferior or remote accommodations.

At the moment, the university is resigned to losing the collection,
and the Schoenbergs, to quote Lawrence Schoenberg, believe that "there is
no reason to expect or think that any reconciliation could occur." But if
Southern California, to which Schoenberg fled from the Nazis, has a vote
to cast, it is surely cast in favor of keeping the collection both
together and in this region. Is there no outside arbiter whom both sides
would accept and by whose decisions both would agree to be bound?

Despite the apparent resignation of both sides to a bitter divorce, no
one who honors Arnold Schoenberg's "Transfigured Night"--a composition
that gives miraculous musical form to the triumph of love over seemingly
irreparable estrangement--should conclude too quickly that light cannot
break even from this darkness.



Type of Material: Editorial

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