When he composed his Wind Quintet Op. 26, Schoenberg had travelled from Romanticism through Expressionism and had, since 1918, been a 'dodecaphonist', using the twelve-tone method that he himself had devised. Dedicated to his newly born grandson 'Bubi Arnold', the quintet was soon after arranged into a sonata for violin (or flute or clarinet) by 'Bubi's' father, the composer's son-in-law Felix Greissle. With Swedish pianist Roland Pöntinen.
Music Web International: Recording of the Year 2005; 10/10 by Classics Today.