Josef Matthias Hauer
March 19, 1883 - September 22, 1959born in Wiener Neustadt, Austria, composed during the Modern period
Biography
Josef Matthias Hauer was the odd man out as far as Viennese serialism was concerned; working independently of Arnold Schoenberg, by 1919 Hauer developed a system of twelve-tone organization identical to Schoenberg's in that no note was heard twice until the other 11 were sounded. Hauer's method of applying the technique to musical composition, however, was completely different from Schoenberg's, and his work was never very seriously considered during his lifetime or even immediately after. Toward the end of the twentieth century, Hauer's music began to appear in concert and on recordings, which has led to a reappraisal of its value.
Born in Wiener Neustedt, Hauer took a basic teaching certificate in 1902 and taught in elementary schools until 1919. He was self-taught in music and orchestration and began to compose in 1912. By the time of his first twelve-tone composition, Nomos for piano, Op. 19 (1919), Hauer had already composed a respectable amount of vocal, orchestral, and chamber music in a modern style that was cutting-edge for its time. His first treatise on twelve-tone composition, Vom Wesen der Musikalischen, appeared in 1920, three years before the first publication of Schoenberg's method.
Selected Discography

