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Ludwig Van Beethoven was born in Bonn, Germany 17 December 1770 and died Vienna,
26 March 1827.
He studied first with his father, Johann, a singer and instrumentalist in the
service of the Elector of Cologne at Bonn, but mainly with C.G. Neefe, court
organist. At 11 ½ he was able to deputize for Neefe; at 12 he had some music
published. In 1787 he went to Vienna, but quickly returned on hearing that his
mother was dying. Five years later he went back to Vienna, where he settled. He
pursued his studies, first with Haydn, but there was some clash of temperaments and
Beethoven studied too with Schenk, Albrechtsberger and Salieri. Until 1794 he was
supported by the Elector at Bonn but he found patrons among the music-loving
Viennese aristocracy and soon enjoyed success as a piano virtuoso, playing at
private houses or palaces rather than in public. His public debut was in 1795;
about the same time his first important publications appeared, three piano trios
op.l and three piano sonatas op.2. As a pianist, it was reported, he had fire,
brilliance and fantasy as well as depth of feeling. It is naturally in the piano
sonatas, writing for his own instrument, that he is at his most original in this
period; the Pathetique belongs to 1799, the Moonlight ('Sonata quasi una fantasia')
to 1801, and these represent only the most obvious innovations in style and
emotional content. These years also saw the composition of his first three piano
concertos, his first two symphonies and a set of six string quartets op.18.
1802, however, was a year of crisis for Beethoven, with his realization that the
impaired hearing he had noticed for some time was incurable and sure to worsen.
That autumn, at a village outside Vienna, Heiligenstadt, he wrote a will-like
document, addressed to his two brothers, describing his bitter unhappiness over his
affliction in terms suggesting that he thought death was near. But he came through
with his determination strengthened and entered a new creative phase, generally
called his 'middle period'. It is characterized by a heroic tone, evident in the
Eroica Symphony (no.3, originally to have been dedicated not to a noble patron but
to Napoleon), in Symphony no.5, where the sombre mood of the c Minor first movement
('Fate knocking on the door') ultimately yields to a triumphant C Major finale with
piccolo, trombones and percussion added to the orchestra, and in his opera
Fidelio . Here the heroic theme is made explicit by the story, in which (in
the post-French Revolution 'rescue opera' tradition) a wife saves her imprisoned
husband from murder at the hands of his oppressive political enemy. The three
string quartets of this period, op.59, are similarly heroic in scale: the first,
lasting some 45 minutes, is conceived with great breadth, and it too embodies a
sense of triumph as the intense f Minor Adagio gives way to a jubilant finale in
the major embodying (at the request of the dedicatee, Count Razumovsky) a Russian
folk melody.
Fidelio, unsuccessful at its premiere, was twice revised by Beethoven and his
librettists and successful in its final version of 1814. Here there is more
emphasis on the moral force of the story. It deals not only with freedom and
justice, and heroism, but also with married love, and in the character of the
heroine Leonore, Beethoven's lofty, idealized image of womanhood is to be seen. He
did not find it in real life he fell in love several times, usually with
aristocratic pupils (some of them married), and each time was either rejected or
saw that the woman did not match his ideals. In 1812, however, he wrote a
passionate love-letter to an 'Eternally Beloved' (probably Antonie Brentano, a
Viennese married to a Frankfurt businessman), but probably the letter was never
sent.
With his powerful and expansive middle-period works, which include the Pastoral
Symphony (no.6, conjuring up his feelings about the countryside, which he loved),
Symphony no.7 and Symphony no. 8, Piano Concertos nos.4 (a lyrical work) and 5 (the
noble and brilliant Emperor) and the Violin Concerto, as well as more chamber works
and piano sonatas (such as the Waldstein and the Appassionata) Beethoven was firmly
established as the greatest composer of his time. His piano-playing career had
finished in 1808 (a charity appearance in 1814 was a disaster because of his
deafness). That year he had considered leaving Vienna for a secure post in Germany,
but three Viennese noblemen had banded together to provide him with a steady income
and he remained there, although the plan foundered in the ensuing Napoleonic wars
in which his patrons suffered and the value of Austrian money declined.
The years after 1812 were relatively unproductive. He seems to have been
seriously depressed, by his deafness and the resulting isolation, by the failure of
his marital hopes and (from 1815) by anxieties over the custodianship of the son of
his late brother, which involved him in legal actions. But he came out of these
trials to write his profoundest music, which surely reflects something of what he
had been through. There are seven piano sonatas in this, his 'late period',
including the turbulent Hammerklavier op.106, with its dynamic writing and its
harsh, rebarbative fugue, and op.110, which also has fugues and much eccentric
writing at the instrument's extremes of compass; there is a great Mass and a Choral
Symphony, no.9 in d Minor, where the extended variation-finale is a setting for
soloists and chorus of Schiller's Ode to Joy; and there is a group of string
quartets, music on a new plane of spiritual depth, with their exalted ideas, abrupt
contrasts and emotional intensity. The traditional four-movement scheme and
conventional forms are discarded in favour of designs of six or seven movements,
some fugal, some akin to variations (these forms especially attracted him in his
late years), some song-like, some martial, one even like a chorale prelude. For
Beethoven, the act of composition had always been a struggle, as the tortuous
scrawls of his sketchbooks show; in these late works the sense of agonizing effort
is a part of the music.
Musical taste in Vienna had changed during the first decades of the 19th
century; the public were chiefly interested in light Italian opera (especially
Rossini) and easygoing chamber music and songs, to suit the prevalent bourgeois
taste. Yet the Viennese were conscious of Beethoven's greatness: they applauded the
Choral Symphony even though, understandably, they found it difficuit, and though
baffled by the late quartets they sensed their extraordinary visionary qualities.
His reputation went far beyond Vienna: the late Mass was first heard in St.
Petersburg, and the initial commission that produced the Choral Symphony had come
from the Philharmonic Society of London. When, early in 1827, he died, 10,000 are
said to have attended the funeral. He had become a public figure, as no composer
had done before. Unlike composers of the preceding generation, he had never been a
purveyor of music to the nobility he had lived into the age - indeed helped create
it - of the artist as hero and the property of mankind at large.
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