Beethoven, Ludwig van (1770-1827), German composer, generally
considered one of the greatest composers in the Western tradition. Born in Bonn,
Beethoven was reared in stimulating, although unhappy, surroundings. His early
signs of musical talent were subjected to the capricious discipline of his
father, a singer in the court chapel. In 1789, because of his father's
alcoholism, the young Beethoven became a court musician in order to support his
family. His early compositions under the tutelage of German composer Christian
Gottlob Neefe-particularly the funeral cantata on the death of Holy Roman
Emperor Joseph II in 1790-signaled an important talent, and it was planned that
Beethoven study in Vienna, Austria, with Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Although
Mozart's death in 1791 prevented this, Beethoven went to Vienna in 1792 and
became a pupil of Austrian composer Joseph Haydn.
In Vienna, Beethoven dazzled the aristocracy with his piano improvisations.
Meanwhile, he entered into increasingly favorable arrangements with Viennese
music publishers. In composition he steered a middle course between the
stylistic extravagance of German composer Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach and what the
public had perceived as the overrefinement of Mozart. The broadening market for
published music enabled Beethoven to succeed as a freelance composer, a path
that Mozart, a decade earlier, had found full of frustration.
In the first decade of the 19th century Beethoven renounced the sectional,
loosely constructed style of works such as the popular Septet op. 20, for
strings and winds, and turned to a fresh expansion of the musical language
bequeathed by Haydn and Mozart. Despite his exaggerated claim that "he had
never learned anything from Haydn"-he had gone so far as to seek additional
instruction from German composer Johann Georg Albrechtsberger-Beethoven soon
revealed his complete assimilation of the Viennese classical style in every
major instrumental genre: symphony, concerto, string quartet, and sonata. The
majority of the works for which he is most readily remembered today were
composed during the decade bounded by the Symphony no. 3 (Eroica, begun 1803;
first performed, 1805) and the Symphony no. 8 (1812), a period known as his
heroic decade.
Beethoven's fame reached its zenith during these years, but the steadily
worsening hearing impairment that he had first noted in 1798 led to an
increasing sense of social isolation. Gradually, Beethoven settled into a
pattern of shifting residences, spending summers in the Viennese suburbs-Heiligenstadt
was a favorite choice-and moving back to the city each autumn. In 1802, in his
celebrated "Heiligenstadt Testament," a quasi-legal letter to his two
brothers, he expressed his agony over his growing deafness. After 1805 accounts
of Beethoven's eccentricities multiplied. He performed in public only rarely and
made his last such appearance in 1814.
Although reports circulated among Beethoven's friends that he was constantly in
love, he tended to choose unattainable women-aristocratic or married or both. In
a famous letter to an "Immortal Beloved" (presumably never sent and
now dated at 1812), he expressed his conflicting feelings for the woman who may
have been the sole person ever to reciprocate his declarations. The long-debated
riddle of her identity was solved beyond reasonable doubt in 1977 by American
musicologist Maynard Solomon, who identified her as Antonie Brentano, the wife
of a Frankfurt merchant and a mother of four. Conceivably, Beethoven's sense of
virtue and fear of marriage contributed to his flight from this relationship.
In 1815, on the death of his older brother, Casper Carl, Beethoven devoted
himself to a costly legal struggle with his sister-in-law for custody of her
nine-year-old son, Karl. Initially, the mother received a favorable ruling, and
only the intervention in 1820 of Beethoven's most powerful patron, the Archduke
Rudolph, won the composer custody of his nephew. Beethoven was not an ideal
parent, however, and enormous friction developed between him and his nephew,
contributing to Karl's attempted suicide in 1826.
By 1818 Beethoven had become virtually deaf and relied on small
"conversation books" in which visitors wrote their remarks to him. He
withdrew from all but a steadily shrinking circle of friends. Except for the
premieres of his Symphony no. 9 and parts of the Missa solemnis in 1824, his
music remained fashionable only among a small group of connoisseurs. His
prestige was still such, however, that during his last illness he received huge
outpourings of sympathy. He died in Vienna on March 26, 1827. Tens of thousands
witnessed his funeral procession.
Musical Development
Beethoven's major output consists of 9 symphonies, 7 concertos
(5 for piano), 17 string quartets, 32 piano sonatas, 10 sonatas for violin and
piano, 5 sonatas for cello and piano, an opera, 2 masses (see Mass, Musical
Settings of), several overtures (see Overture), and numerous sets of piano
variations. He has traditionally been referred to as music's "bridge to
romanticism," and his oeuvre is simplistically divided into three roughly
equal periods. Today most scholars view him as the last great representative of
the Viennese classical style, a composer who at two important junctures in his
life turned away from the aesthetic of the emerging romantic period in favor of
renewed exploration of the legacy of Haydn and Mozart. After arriving in Vienna,
Beethoven alternated between compositions based openly on classical models, such
as the String Quartet in A Major op. 18 no. 5 (1800; patterned on Mozart's
String Quartet K. 464), and those based on looser Italianate structures, such as
the song "Adelaide" (1795).
The "new manner" that Beethoven announced for his work in a
conversation with a friend in 1802 marks his first return to the Viennese
classical tradition. Although his works of the decade from 1802 to 1812 project
a heroic aura, musically they represent an expansion of the tighter forms of
Haydn and Mozart. This is apparent both in works of unprecedented scope, such as
the Eroica Symphony and the Piano Concerto no. 5 (Emperor, 1809), and in
formally compressed works such as the Symphony no. 5 (1808) and the Piano Sonata
op. 57 (Appassionata, 1805). In these works Beethoven proved that a style
founded on thematic integration and on the harmonic polarization achieved by
manipulating opposing keys could produce works of remarkable expressive power.
The completion of the Symphony no. 8 and the fading of hopes for a successful
relationship with the "Immortal Beloved" left Beethoven in a state of
compositional uncertainty. His prodigious output of the previous decade ceased.
The few works of the years after 1812-such as the op. 98 song cycle An die ferne
Geliebte (To the Distant Beloved, 1816) and the Piano Sonata in A Major op. 101
(1817)-took on an experimental hue, reviving and expanding on the more relaxed
musical structures Beethoven had employed in the 1790s. The handful of
open-ended, cyclic works of this period exercised the most direct musical
influence on the succeeding generation of romantic composers (apparent, for
example, in the song cycles of German composer Robert Schumann). In 1818
Beethoven inaugurated a second return to the tightly structured heroic style.
The move was marked by the Piano Sonata in B-flat Major op. 106 (Hammerklavier),
a work of unprecedented length and difficulty.
The works of Beethoven's last period, rather than having been composed in sets
or even in pairs, are each marked by an individuality that later composers would
admire but could scarcely emulate. In the Ninth Symphony and the Missa solemnis
Beethoven gave expression to an all-embracing view of idealized humanity largely
rooted in the Enlightenment (see Enlightenment, Age of) and more compelling than
the equally lofty ideals portrayed a decade earlier in his only opera, Fidelio
(1814). The dominant private dimension of Beethoven's late style gave rise to
the five string quartets of 1824 to 1826, the last two of which were written
without commissions. In these works Beethoven achieved an ideal synthesis
between popular and learned styles and between the humorous and the sublime.
Judged inaccessible in their time, the string quartets have become-as has so
much of Beethoven's output-yardsticks against which all other musical
achievements are measured.
Beethoven's lifelong habit of sketching musical compositions as he worked them
out became even more important as he grew older. His more than 7000 pages of
drafts entered outdoors on scraps of paper or in small notebooks, as well as the
more extensive notebooks he filled up indoors, form one of Western music's most
enduring monuments to musical creativity.
Influence
Beethoven towered over the 19th century, embodying the heroic ideal and the romantic perception of the composer as an artist who pursues a personal vision beyond the creation of music by order of an ecclesiastical or aristocratic patron. However, Beethoven's immediate musical influence was limited. For some composers-such as Johannes Brahms, who produced no symphony until his 40s-Beethoven's legacy was paralyzing. Although German composer Richard Wagner invoked Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, particularly its choral finale, as support for his own vision of the music drama, it was not until the late romantic symphonies of Austrian composers Anton Bruckner and, especially, Gustav Mahler that Beethoven's symphonic ideal was carried to what is often regarded as its final stage of development. Today Beethoven's works form the core of orchestral and chamber music repertoires worldwide.
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