- beetoven



beethoven
 
This Day in History

Today's Birthday

Quotation of the Day

This article concerns the composer of music. For other uses of the name Beethoven, see Beethoven (disambiguation).
Ludwig van Beethoven

Ludwig van Beethoven (baptized 17 December, 1770, Bonn – died 26 March, 1827, Vienna, Austria) was a German composer of classical music, who lived predominantly in Vienna, Austria. He was a major musical figure in the transitional period between the Classical and Romantic eras. Beethoven is widely regarded as one of history's greatest composers. His reputation has inspired — and in many cases intimidated — composers, musicians, and audiences who were to come after him. Among his most widely-recognized works are his Fifth Symphony, Ninth Symphony, Sixth Symphony, the piano piece Für Elise, the Pathétique Sonata and the Moonlight Sonata.

Contents

  • 1 Life and work
  • 2 Musical style and innovations
  • 3 Personal beliefs and their musical influence
  • 4 Beethoven the Romantic?
  • 5 Grosse Fuge manuscript
  • 6 See also
  • 7 Media
  • 8 References
  • 9 External links

Life and work

For more details on this topic, see Life and work of Ludwig van Beethoven.

Beethoven was born in Bonn, Germany, to Johann van Beethoven (1740–1792), of Flemish origins, and Magdalena Keverich van Beethoven (1744–1787). Until relatively recently, many reference works showed 16 December as Beethoven's "date of birth", since he was baptized on 17 December and children at that time were generally baptized the day after their birth. However, modern scholarship does not make such assumptions.

Beethoven's first music teacher was his father, a musician in the Electoral court at Bonn and an alcoholic who beat him and unsuccessfully attempted to exhibit him as a child prodigy like Mozart. However, others soon noticed Beethoven's talent. He was given instruction and employment by Christian Gottlob Neefe, as well as financial sponsorship by the Prince-Elector. Beethoven's mother died when he was 17, and for several years he was responsible for raising his two younger brothers.

Beethoven moved to Vienna in 1792, where he intended to study with Joseph Haydn, but the old man had little time for teaching and he passed Beethoven onto Johann Albrechtsberger. He quickly established a reputation as a piano virtuoso, and more slowly, as a composer. He settled into the career pattern he would follow for the remainder of his life: rather than working for the church or a noble court (as most composers before him had done), he was a freelancer, supporting himself with public performances, sales of his works and stipends from members of the aristocracy who recognized his ability.

Beethoven 1820 portrait

Beethoven's career as a composer is usually divided into Early, Middle, and Late periods.

In the Early period, he is seen as emulating his great predecessors Haydn and Mozart, at the same time exploring new directions and gradually expanding the scope and ambition of his work. Some important pieces from the Early period are the first and second symphonies, the first six string quartets, the first two piano concertos, and the first twenty piano sonatas, including the famous Pathétique and Moonlight.

The Middle period began shortly after Beethoven's personal crisis centering around deafness. The period is noted for large-scale works expressing heroism and struggle; these include many of the most famous works of classical music. Middle period works include six symphonies (Nos. 3–8), the last three piano concertos and his only violin concerto, five string quartets (Nos. 7–11), the next seven piano sonatas including the Waldstein, and Appassionata, and Beethoven's only opera, Fidelio.

Beethoven's Late period began around 1816 and lasted until Beethoven died in 1827. The Late works are greatly admired for and characterized by their intellectual depth, intense and highly personal expression, and experimentation with forms (for example, the Quartet in C Sharp Minor has seven movements, while most famously his Ninth Symphony adds choral forces to the orchestra in the last movement). This period includes the Missa Solemnis, the last five string quartets and the last five piano sonatas.

Considering the depth and extent of Beethoven's artistic explorations, as well as the composer's success in making himself comprehensible to the widest possible audience, the Austrian-born British musician and writer Hans Keller pronounced Beethoven "humanity's greatest mind altogether".

Beethoven's personal life was troubled. Around age 28, he started to become deaf, which led him to contemplate suicide (see the 1802 Heiligenstadt Testament). He was attracted to unattainable (married or aristocratic) women, whom he idealized; he never married. Some scholars believe his period of low productivity from about 1812 to 1816 was caused by depression resulting from Beethoven's realization that he would never marry.

Beethoven quarrelled, often bitterly, with his relatives and others (including a painful and public custody battle over his nephew Karl); he frequently treated other people badly. He moved often and had strange personal habits, such as wearing filthy clothing even as he washed compulsively. He often had financial troubles.

Many listeners perceive an echo of Beethoven's life in his music, which often depicts struggle followed by triumph. This description is often applied to Beethoven's creation of masterpieces in the face of his severe personal difficulties.

Beethoven was often in poor health, especially after his mid-20s, when he began to suffer from serious stomach pains. In 1826 his health took a drastic turn for the worse. His death the following year was attributed to liver disease, but modern research on a lock of Beethoven's hair taken at the time of his death, and a few pieces of his skull [1] shows that lead poisoning could well have contributed to his ill-health and ultimately to his death (the levels of lead were more than 100 times higher than levels found in most people today). The source of the lead poisoning may have been fish from the heavily polluted Danube River and lead compounds used to sweeten wines. It is unlikely that lead poisoning was the cause of his deafness, which several researchers think was caused by an autoimmune disorder such as systemic lupus erythematosus. The hair analysis did not detect mercury, which is consistent with the view that Beethoven did not have syphilis (syphilis was treated with mercury compounds at the time). The absence of drug metabolites suggests Beethoven avoided opiate painkillers.

Beethoven continued working on his music until the day he died.

Musical style and innovations

Main article: Beethoven's musical style and innovations

Beethoven is viewed as the transitional figure between the Classical and Romantic eras of musical history. As far as musical form is concerned, he built on the principles of sonata form and motivic development that he had inherited from Haydn and Mozart, but greatly extended them, writing longer and more ambitious movements. But Beethoven also radically redefined the symphony, transforming it from the rigidly structured four-ordered-movements form of Haydn's era to a fairly open ended form that could sustain as many movements as necessary, and of whatever form as necessary to give the work cohesion.

The work of Beethoven's Middle period is celebrated for its frequent heroic expression, and the works of his Late period for their intellectual depth. See also History of sonata form and Romantic music.

Personal beliefs and their musical influence

Beethoven was much taken by the ideals of the Enlightenment and by the growing Romanticism in Europe. He initially dedicated his third symphony, the Eroica (Italian for "heroic"), to Napoleon in the belief that the general would sustain the democratic and republican ideals of the French Revolution, but in 1804 tore out the title page upon which he had written a dedication to Napoleon, as Napoleon's imperial ambitions became clear, renamed the symphony as the "Sinfonia Eroica, composta per festeggiare il Sovvenire di un grand Uomo", or in English, "composed to celebrate the memory of a great man". The fourth movement of his Ninth Symphony features an elaborate choral setting of Schiller's ode An die Freude ("To Joy"), an optimistic hymn championing the brotherhood of humanity.

Scholars disagree on Beethoven's religious beliefs and the role they played in his work. For discussion, see Beethoven's religious beliefs.

Beethoven the Romantic?

A continuing controversy surrounding Beethoven is whether he was a Romantic or a Classical composer. As documented elsewhere, since the meanings of the word "Romantic" and the definition of the period "Romanticism" both vary by discipline, Beethoven's inclusion as a member of that movement or period must be looked at in context.

If we consider the Romantic movement as an aesthetic epoch in literature and the arts generally, Beethoven sits squarely in the first half along with literary Romantics such as the German poets Goethe and Schiller (whose texts both he and the much more straightforwardly Romantic Franz Schubert drew on for songs) and the English poet Percy Shelley. He was also called a Romantic by contemporaries such as Spohr and E.T.A. Hoffman. He is often considered the composer of the first Song Cycle and was influenced by Romantic folk idioms, for example in his use of the work of Robert Burns. He set dozens of such poems (and arranged folk melodies) for voice, piano, and violin.

If on the other hand we consider the context of musicology, where Romantic music is dated later; the matter is one of considerably greater debate. For some experts, Beethoven is not a Romantic, and his being one is a myth; for others he stands as a transitional figure, or an immediate precursor to Romanticism, the "inventor" of the Romantic period; for others he is the prototypical, or even archetypical, Romantic composer, complete with myth of heroic genius and individuality. The marker buoy of Romanticism has been pushed back and forth several times by scholarship, and it remains a subject of intense debate, in no small part because Beethoven is seen as a seminal figure. To those for whom the Enlightenment represents the basis of Modernity, he must therefore be unequivocally a Classicist, while for those who see the Romantic sensibility as a key to later aesthetics (including the aesthetics of our own time), he must be a Romantic. Between these two extremes there are, of course, innumerable gradations.

Beethoven's grave in the Zentralfriedhof, Vienna.

Listening to Beethoven's music yields another possible scholarly analysis: there is definitely an evolution in style from Beethoven's earliest compositions to his later works. The young Beethoven can be seen toiling to conform to the aesthetic models of his contemporaries: he wants to write music that is acceptable in the society of his days. Later, there is much more iconoclasm in his approach, like adding a chorus to a symphony, where a symphony had until then only been a purely instrumental genre. This means that the question changes from whether Beethoven was a classicist or a romantic, to: where is the pivotal moment that Beethoven tilted from dominant classicism to dominant romanticism?. Most scholars seem to concur: the presentation of the 5th and 6th symphonies in a single concert in 1808 is probably closest to that pivotal point. In the 5th symphony, he let a short pounding motto theme run through all movements of the composition (unheard of until then). Then the 6th symphony was the first example of a symphony composed as "program music" (what in Romanticism became standard practice), and it broke up the traditional arrangement of a symphony in four movements. Yet, after that, Beethoven still wrote his very "Classical" 8th symphony and some innocent-sounding chamber music for the English market. However, by the end of the first decade of the 19th century, Beethoven the romantic was without a doubt primary.

In contrast, Carl Dahlhaus argues that the evolution of Beethoven's style actually takes him past Romanticism to a place where he was separate from the music of his contemporaries. Dahlhaus points out that our understanding of Beethoven as a Romantic composer derives largely from Beethoven's early middle period, which contains the Symphony No. 3 and Symphony No. 5. Beethoven's impact on other Romantic composers, however, is taken largely from works between Ops. 74 and 97, of the second half of the so-called middle period. Dahlhaus argues that the tradition of Romantic music is essentially a tradition of Schubertian music, and that Beethoven's influence on Schubert is largely taken from Ops. 74 to 97. By the time Beethoven reaches the late period, he is such an individual as to be best understood as no longer belonging to the same genre as his Romantic contemporaries.

Grosse Fuge manuscript

On October 13, 2005 it was reported that an authentic 1826 Beethoven manuscript titled "Grosse Fuge" (a piano four-hands version of the Op. 133 string quartet finale) was found by a Pennsylvania librarian at the Palmer Theological Seminary in Wynnewood, Pennsylvania in July 2005. It had been missing for 115 years. The manuscript was auctioned by Sotheby's Auction House on 1 December, 2005; It realised GBP £1.12 million pounds (US$1.95 million) to an unknown buyer. Its known provenance is: The manuscript was listed in an 1890 catalogue and sold at an auction in Berlin to a Cincinnati, Ohio industrialist; his daughter gave it and other manuscripts including a Mozart Fantasia to a church in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1952. It is not known how the Beethoven manuscript came to be in the possession of the library.

See also

  • Category:Compositions by Ludwig van Beethoven
  • Three-key exposition
  • Beethoven as fictional character
  • Beethoven and his contemporaries
  • List of works by Beethoven is a listing of most of Beethoven's works, including links to all of the works discussed in their own Wikipedia article.
  • List of historical sites associated with Ludwig van Beethoven
  • List of composers

Media

Fugue in B Flat Minor, arranged for String Quintet (info)
From Well-Tempered Clavier (Book One) by J.S. Bach, Hess 38
Laendler in C Minor (info)
Hess 68
Komm' o Hoffnung.ogg (info)
The Komm' o Hoffnung.ogg aria from Fidelio, performed by Alice Guszalewicz
Moonlight Sonata (info)
Piano Sonata No. 14 in C-sharp minor, 1st movement
Pathetique Sonata (info)
Piano Sonata No. 8 in C minor, 1st & 2nd movements
Ode to Joy (info)
Excerpt, Symphony No. 9 in D minor, 4th movement
Opus 30, movement 1 (info)
Violin Sonata No. 6 in A major, 1st movement
Opus 30, movement 2 (info)
Violin Sonata No. 6 in A major, 2nd movement
Opus 30, movement 3 (info)
Violin Sonata No. 6 in A major, 3rd movement
Opus 47, movement 1 (info)
Violin Sonata No. 9 in A major "Kreutzer", 1st movement
Opus 47, movement 2 (info)
Violin Sonata No. 9 in A major "Kreutzer", 2nd movement
Opus 47, movement 3 (info)
Violin Sonata No. 9 in A major "Kreutzer", 3rd movement
Concerto 4, movement 1 (info)
Piano Concerto No. 4 in G major, 1st movement
Concerto 4, movement 2 (info)
Piano Concerto No. 4 in G major, 2nd movement
Opus 111, movement 1 (info)
Piano Sonata No. 32 in C minor, 1st movement
Opus 111, movement 2 (info)
Piano Sonata No. 32 in C minor, 2nd movement
Opus 62 (info)
Overture - Coriolan
Piano Sonata 3, movement 1 (info)
From Piano Sonata no. 3
Symphony 5, movement 1 (info)
From Symphony no. 5
Symphony 5, movement 2 (info)
From Symphony no. 5
Symphony 5, movement 3 (info)
From Symphony no. 5
Symphony 5, movement 4 (info)
From Symphony no. 5
Problems listening to the files? See media help.


References

  • Carl Dahlhaus, Nineteenth Century Music, trans. J. Bradford Robinson (1989) ISBN 0520052919

External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
Ludwig van Beethoven
  • Beethoven-Haus Bonn. Official website of Beethoven-Haus in Bonn, Germany. Links to extensive studio and digital archive, library holdings, the Beethoven-Haus Museum (including "internet exhibitions" and "virtual visits"), the Beethoven-Archiv research center, and information on Beethoven publications of interest to the specialist and general reader. Extensive collection of Beethoven's compositions and written documents, with sound samples.
  • Works by Ludwig van Beethoven at Project Gutenberg, the oldest producer of public domain ebooks.
  • The Unheard Beethoven. Digital archive of MIDI files of hundreds of Beethoven compositions never recorded and many that have never been published.
  • The Guevara Lock of Beethoven's Hair. Page from The Ira F. Brilliant Center for Beethoven Studies.
  • Hair analysis says Beethoven died of lead poisoning. CBC News, 18 October 2000.
  • Beethoven Lives Upstairs (1989) at the Internet Movie Database. Film starring Neil Munro as Beethoven.
  • Immortal Beloved (1994) at the Internet Movie Database. Film starring Gary Oldman as Beethoven.
  • Piano Society — Beethoven. Many free recordings, articles and biography.
  • Beethoven cylinder recordings, from the Cylinder Preservation and Digitization Project at the University of California, Santa Barbara Library.
  • French Pictures of : "Beethoven in Vienna and Baden"

Ludwig van Beethoven
   Main article - Life and Work - Musical style and innovations - Beethoven and his contemporaries - List of works   


Romanticism
18th century - 19th century
Romantic music: Beethoven - Brahms - Chopin - Strauss - Wagner
   Romantic poetry: Blake - Burns - Byron - Coleridge - Goethe - Keats - Mickiewicz - Shelley - Wordsworth   
Romantic art: Copley - Goya - Hudson River school - Leutze
Romantic culture: Bohemianism - Romantic nationalism
<< Age of Enlightenment Victorianism >>
Modernism >>



ilo:Ludwig van Beethoven

Search Term: "Ludwig_van_Beethoven"

 

beethoven news and beethoven articles

Here's our top rated beethoven links for the day:

Beethoven's opera 'Fidelio' is a fitting project finale 

Boston Globe - Mar 23 2:01 AM
Tonight James Levine begins the final installment of the Boston Symphony Orchestra's two-season, 10-program examination of works by Beethoven and Schoenberg . He'll conduct three concert performances of Beethoven's sole opera, "Fidelio ," over the next five days.
Barenboim on Beethoven Tonight on PBS's Great Performances  
Playbill Arts - Mar 22 11:35 AM
Tonight on PBS, the Great Performances series offers Barenboim on Beethoven , a concert film/documentary featuring the renowned pianist and conductor Daniel Barenboim performing and discussing Ludwig van Beethoven's great piano sonatas.

EU celebrates its first 50 years 
AP via Yahoo! News - Mar 24 12:35 AM
Accompanied by a soundtrack ranging from Beethoven to the Beatbox Battle Allstars, Europe's leaders celebrate half-a-century of peace, democracy and unity this weekend, but finding harmony on the EU's future direction is proving tough.

Cheers for Lill and Beethoven: what a pair 
North Dakota Public Radio - Mar 21 9:13 PM
Pianist John Lill received a standing ovation for his performance of two of Beethoven's greatest concerti. The British-born musician, a Beethoven specialist, understood each note and emotion of the classic music he played.

A Pianist Displays the Form of a Winner 
New York Times - Mar 22 4:20 PM
Ms. Fliter displayed a brilliant, muscular yet seemingly relaxed technique in her program of Beethoven and Chopin at Zankel Hall on Wednesday.

Calls for rapid EU overhaul at anniversary summit 
Reuters via Yahoo! News - Mar 24 8:45 AM
Supporters of closer European integration used the 50th anniversary of the EU on Saturday to press for a swift overhaul of the bloc that would prepare it for 21st century challenges such as terrorism and climate change.

Ambitious treaty planned for EU's 50th birthday 
CNN.com - Mar 24 6:52 AM
BERLIN, Germany (Reuters) -- Europe's longest-serving leader urged the European Union to finalize an ambitious reform treaty by the end of the year as leaders from 27 member states gathered in Berlin on Saturday to celebrate the bloc's 50th anniversary.

EU celebrates its first 50 years 
USA Today - Mar 24 1:11 AM
Leaders from the EU which turns 50 on Sunday are gathering for two days of revelry in the German capital featuring classical concerts, fine art and all-night techno music.

U. of C. Presents set for new season 
Chicago Tribune - Mar 23 3:50 AM
A complete Beethoven cycle played by the Pacifica Quartet, the early music groups Les Violons du Roy and Tallis Scholars, Chicago violinist Jennifer Koh, and the local recital debuts of British mezzo-soprano Alice Coote and the Belcea Quartet will highlight the 2007-08 season of University of Chicago Presents.

What?s on Thursday Night 
New York Times - Mar 21 9:53 PM
9 P.M. (22) BARENBOIM ON BEETHOVEN The Argentine-born pianist and conductor Daniel Barenboim, left, began learning the Beethoven sonatas as a young boy; by 17 he could play the entire cycle. ?No matter that my fingers have been playing the same notes since I was 8 years old,? he said. ?The fingers know it, the brain knows it, and yet I find something new in it.? In this ?Great Performances? ...

Last Update: 2007-03-24 19:16:45

Thank you for reading the beethoven page - bethoven

As an extra bonus here are the top searched terms over the past month for beethoven. Now you can see what everyone else is searching for in regards to beethoven.



bethoven
beetoven
bethoven mp3
beethovan
beathoven
beehtoven
beethowen mp3
speed over beetoven
bethoven bio
speed over bethoven
beethoveen
ludwig van bethoven
beethven
beetohven
beetoven bio
bethoven midi
hotel berlin van bethoven
beethhoven
beethoben
beetovens 5th
bethoven 5th symphony mp3
ludwig van beetoven
beethhoven info
berlin hotel ludwig van bethoven
bethoven bibliografia
bethoven virus
bethoven virus.mp3 mp3
bethovens
bethovens first music teacher
free beethovan
where did bethoven make his first as an adult
beethooven
beethove
beetoven sheet music
beetoven virus
berry roll over bethoven
bethoven fur elise
biografia de bethoven
listen to speed over beetoven
beethovan badlands
beetoven biography
bethoven symphony
ludwig van beethovan
parents of bethoven
what food did bethoven enjoy
a fifth of bethoven
beathoven radio
beehoven
beethovan birthday
beethoveen bio
beethoveen quotes
bethoven 5
bethoven medal
historia de bethoven
jim beem whiskey decanters beethovan
ludwig bethoven portrait
roll over beetoven written by
the opening of misty bethoven
what illness did beethove die from
what was bethoven famous piece
beethooven the dog
beethovan moonlight sonata
beethovan ode to joy story
beetoven 9th symphany
beetoven and deafness
beetoven bach morzart
beetovens birthday
ludwig van beethven
misty beetoven
piano sheet music beetoven
a fifth of beethovan
beathoven mp3
beathovens fifth single
beatles roll over bethoven
beehtoven bio
beethhoven bio
beethhoven most famous symphony
beethovan 5th symphony mp3
beethovan fun facts
beethoveen 9th symphony
beethoveen fur elise
beethowen
beetoven facts
beetoven no. 5
beetoven symphony 5
beetovens
beetovens history
beetovens instuments
bethoven 4
bethoven 5th
bethoven biography
bethoven dog
bethoven elise mp3
bethoven favoite food
bethoven freemasonry
bethoven moonlight
bethoven shirt
bethoven symphony 7
bethoven wein
bethoven wine
biography on beetoven the composer
chuck berry roll over bethoven
elise bethoven mp3
fur elise bethoven mp3
hotel berlin bethoven
life facts about bethoven
list songs beethoveen composed
medical history of beetohven
midnight blue song beetoven music
music beetoven
piano sheet music beetoven ninth symphony
roll over beetoven
roll over bethoven mp3
speed over beathoven
speed over beehtoven
starcraft beetoven
.info about ludwig van bethoven
4xl bethoven shirt
5th of beathoven
baethoven
banya beetoven virus mp3
beat beethovan
beathoven eliza
beathoven stream radio
beathovens summer sun
beeethoven
beetgoven
beethoen
beethova obas
beethovan 3rd
beethovan 5th
beethovan mp3
beethovan music
beethovan symphony
beethovans 5th
beethovans 5th ring tone
beethoveen 9th symphony papers
beethoveen symphony 5
beethovon
beethovon virus mp3
beethowen 10
beethowen f?r elise remix
beethven baceball
beetohven tempest sonata john browning
beetohven trans siberian orchestra
beetoven .mid
beetoven 5
beetoven 5 symphony mp3
beetoven 5th symphany
beetoven 9 mp3
beetoven life growing up
beetoven moonlight
beetoven mp3
beetoven music
beetoven music for ocarina
beetoven music midnight blue
beetoven music sheet for ocarina
beetoven ode to joy
beetoven syphony 9
beetoven vers
beetoven virus_banya mp3
beetoven wav
beetovens 5th symphony
beetovens 6th
beetovens birth
beetovens ninth symphony
beetovens wig
bethoven 5 mp3
bethoven 5 remix
bethoven 5th remix
bethoven 9 symphony
bethoven 9 syphonia mp3
bethoven 9th
bethoven biography.
bethoven come to me
bethoven duet for viola and cello
bethoven famile
bethoven live
bethoven music
bethoven piano
bethoven pump
bethoven pump mp3
bethoven radio
bethoven remix
bethoven sonate op.2 no1 f minor f moll
bethoven symphony 6
bethoven symphony no 3 mp3
bethoven techno
bethoven virus to pump it up mp3
bethovens midnight
bethovens third
biografia de cudwing van bethoven
black beethovan
child actor bethoven
clarinet beethovan
club beethovan montreal
dance dance revolution speed over beetohven
download free bethoven ode to joy
download free mp3 bethoven ode to joy
downlod mp3 bethoven ode to joy
eethoven
evening at the syphony by motzart and bethoven
facts about beetoven
facts about ludiwig van beetoven
fluer-de-lis bethoven
free beethovan download
fuga beethoveen mp3
full jim beem whiskey decanters beethovan
f?r elise beetoven
how many symphonies did beeethoven write
how old was beetoven when he published his first work
k elise bethoven mp3
listen to bethoven
maple trees bethoven
negro beethovan
notes to songs of beehtoven
ode to joy beethhoven
ode to joy beetoven
papers on beethoveen 9th symphony
piano sheet music, bethoven
pieces from beethhoven
rollover beathoven
sonata es-dur bethoven mp3
speed bethoven mp3
speed over beethovan
speed over beetohven
speed over beetohven dance dance revolution extreme
speed over beetoven mp3
speed over bethoven mp3
speedover beetoven
speedover bethoven
symphony 3 - bethoven
symphony number 3 bethoven
was ludwig van bethoven married
what country was beetoven born in
what famous musicians did beetoven meet and/ or study with
what food did beethooven like
what is beethoben main contributions to history
when did beetoven die

 

 

 

                                                                   © PaleAutonomy.com. All Rights Reserved