Though written in a
freely atonal style,
Pierrot lunaire uses a variety of classical
forms and techniques, including
canon,
fugue,
rondo,
passacaglia, and free
counterpoint. The instrumental combinations (including doublings) vary between most movements. The entire ensemble is used only in Nos. 6, 11, 14, 15 (end), 16, 18, 19 (end), 20, and 21. Musicologist Alan Lessem states about the work that "on the whole instrumental
textures tend to become fuller as the work progresses" and that, in general, "the piano is the leading [instrumental] protagonist of the melodramas." The poetry is a German version of a
rondeau of the old French type with a double
refrain. Each poem consists of three
stanzas of 4 + 4 + 5 lines, with the first two lines of the first stanza (1,2) repeated as the last two lines of the second stanza (7,8), and line 1 additionally repeated (13) to close the third stanza and the poem. The first poem is shown below.
Sprechstimme / Sprechgesang The atonal,
expressionistic settings of the text, with their echoes of German
cabaret, bring the poems vividly to life.
Sprechstimme is a style in which the vocalist uses the specified
rhythms and
pitches but does not sustain the pitches, allowing them to drop or rise, in the manner of
speech. Schoenberg describes the technique in a foreword to the score: In the score,
Sprechstimme is indicated with small x's through the
stems of notes. Though
Sprechstimme is used throughout the piece, Schoenberg also occasionally indicates that certain passages are to be sung (
gesungen). ==Notable recordings==