Leopold Spinner died on 12 August 1980; and with him one of the few remaining direct links with the second Viennese school. Since the publication of my earlier two articles on Spinner's music, one or two more works have been published. There have been isolated performances; for example, the Sonatina for Violoncello and Piano has been performed, and it has also been broadcast in Austria; and the songs, op.8 and op. 16, were broadcast on BBC Radio 3 last year. But these serve only to emphasize the extent to which the musical world at the moment fails to notice the existence of a composer whose ideals are precision and economy of statement, development, and form; clarity of texture; and a syntax based on that ‘predominance and total engagement of motivic obligation as the structurally unifying factor in a complete fusion between traditional homophonic concepts and the strictest polyphonic presentation’ to which Spinner himself, speaking of Webern, referred. Not until we see that the communication of genuinely original musical thought and feeling is achieved by uncompromisingly personal extension of a tradition — and not by climbing onto one of the fashionable band-waggons (‘texture’, ‘systems’, allusion to or quotation of the more comfortable aspects of the 19th century, or whatever)—will we respond to Spinner's music. In the meantime, deaf to a significant individual voice and resistant to the possibilities of further development inherent in the language spoken by that voice, it is we who are the losers.