Leopold Spinner
Leopold Spinner was an Austrian-born, British-domiciled composer and editor.
Biography
Spinner was born of Austrian parentage in Lemberg. From 1926 to 1930 he studied composition in Vienna with Paul Amadeus Pisk and afterwards began to attract international attention with works which were performed at the ISCM Festivals or awarded prizes. Nevertheless, from 1935 to 1938 he underwent a second period of study, as a pupil of Anton Webern. He may be regarded as a representative of the so-called Second Viennese School.Fearing Nazi persecution Spinner emigrated to England in 1939 and spent the war years in Yorkshire, working part of the time as a lathe operator in a locomotive factory in Bradford. From 1947 he worked as a music-copyist and arranger for Boosey & Hawkes, moving to London in 1954. In 1958 he succeeded Erwin Stein as editor at Boosey & Hawkes, later becoming Chief Editor. He remained with Boosey & Hawkes until his retirement in 1975. His skills and exactitude were highly praised by Stravinsky.
Compositions
From 1926 to his death in London in 1980 Spinner steadily and painstakingly built up an individual body of work, adapting and renewing classical forms along the lines that had been indicated by his teacher Webern. His early works include a String Trio, the Symphony for small orchestra, the Little Quartet and the Passacaglia for 11 Instruments. These were all heard at ISCM concerts during the 1930s. However, only one of his pre-war compositions, the Sonata for Violin and Piano, was given an opus number, an indication that his previous life was behind him once he left Vienna.Post war pieces include an Ouvertüre in honour of Schoenberg's 70th birthday, a Piano Concerto, a Violin Concerto, Prelude and Variations dedicated to Stravinsky, Ricercata for orchestra, Cantatas on poems of Nietzsche and on German folksong texts, string quartets, trios, works for violin and piano, solo piano pieces, several sets of songs and some arrangements of Irish folksongs. His last work was a Chamber Symphony.
Michael Graubart has championed Spinner's music in articles and performances. In 1982 he conducted the first performances of two works from 1971 in London: The Wind Sonata, Op. 23 and the Two Songs, Op. 24 for soprano and six instruments. Malcolm Hayes highlighted the unusual scoring of the Wind Sonata, and its evocation of the sound world of Viennese expressionism, but combined with the articulation and clarity more associated with late Stravinsky. The Two Songs, in which the soloist is accompanied by flute, oboe, alto saxophone, guitar and celeste, show a calmer and more lyrical side to Spinner's music despite the intense polyphony and motivic control, and "the tendency of Spinner's harmonic ear towards consonance".