‘LENGEND OF MUSIC
--BETHOVEN
Music lives forever and Music created by Luwing
Van Beethoven still lives on and on
It was in July 2000 i was shoping in SOGO stores in TAIPIE along with
my colleage VIJAY ,and there was a sale of Classical music ,so by chance i
picked up Beethoven CD's in all 10 CDs and i started listening to
them,initially i found it strange and very much new kind of music ,much
different from Indian Music ,i was so amazed with composition so well done 2
centuries ago ,i became a a addict to Beethoven music ,at times i was listening
to Beethoven music for 8 to 10 hours,and very little sleep and found it so
refreshing and making my mind and soul so relaxed and had a profound effect on
my day to day ,i kind of more relaxed and find things to work so well.
I started to become interested in the person who wrote these
compositions ,i started reading of beethoven and found out his amazing music
skills,truelly a LEGEND of music,even after 200 years his music makes people so
happy ,isnit amazing?isnit great
?.
I salute him for his great skills.Now when ever i am upset i will
immediatelly listen to Beethoven's music and become so relaxed.
I thank GOD almighty for giving Beethoven the skills .
Here is a small collection about Beethoven .
Born in Bonn in 1770, the eldest son of a singer in the Kapelle of the
Archbishop-Elector of Cologne and grandson of the Archbishop's Kapellmeister,
Beethoven moved in 1792 to Vienna, where he had some lessons from Haydn and
others, quickly establishing himself as a remarkable keyboard-player and
original composer. By 1815 increasing deafness made public performance
impossible and accentuated existing eccentricities of character, patiently
tolerated by a series of rich patrons and his royal pupil the Archduke Rudolph.
Beethoven did much to enlarge the possibilities of music and widen the horizons
of later generations of composers. To his contemporaries he was sometimes a
controversial figure, making heavy demands on listeners both by the length and
by the complexity of his writing, as he explored new fields of music.
STAGE WORKS
Beethoven wrote only one opera, eventually called Fidelio after the
name assumed by the heroine Leonora, who disguises herself as a boy and takes
employment at the prison in which her husband has been unjustly incarcerated.
This escape opera, for which there was precedent in contemporary France, ends
with the defeat of the evil prison governor and the rescue of Florestan,
testimony to the love and constancy of his wife Leonora. Beethoven contemplated
other operas, but eventually only wrote the one, first staged in 1805 and
mounted again in a revised performance in 1814, under more favourable
circumstances. The ballet The Creatures of Prometheus was staged in Vienna in
1801, and he wrote incidental music for various other dramatic productions,
including Goethe's Egmont, von Kotzebue's curious The Ruins of Athens, and the
same writer's King Stephen
Music lives on
Beethoven's most impressive choral work is the Missa Solennis, written
for the enthronement of his pupil Archduke Rudolph as Archbishop of Olmutz, but
finished too late for that occasion. An earlier work, the oratorio The Mount of
Olives, is less well known. In common with other composers, he wrote a number of
songs. Of these the best known are probably the settings of Goethe, which did
little to impress the venerable poet and writer, who ignored their existence,
and the cycle of six songs known as An die ferne Geliebte (To the Distant
Beloved). The song Adelaide is challenging but not infrequently heard.
Orchestral Music
Beethoven completed nine symphonies, works that influenced the whole
future of music by the expansion of the traditional classical form. The best
known are the Third, "Eroica", originally intended to celebrate the
initially republican achievements of Napoleon, the Fifth, the Sixth,
"Pastoral", and the Ninth, "Choral". The less satisfactory
Battle Symphony celebrates the earlier military victories of the Duke of Wellington.
For the theatre and various other occasions Beethoven wrote a number of
Overtures, including four for his only opera, Fidelio, one under that name and
the others under the name of the heroine, Leonora. Other Overtures include
Egmont, Coriolan, Prometheus, The Consecration of the House and The Ruins of
Athens.
Beethoven completed one violin concerto
and five piano concertos, as well as a triple concerto for violin, cello and
piano, and a curious Choral Fantasia,for solo piano, chorus and orchestra. The
piano concertos were for the composer's own use in concert performance. The
Fifth, the so-called "Emperor" Concerto, is possibly the most
impressive. The single Violin Concerto is part of the standard repertoire, with
two Romances, possible slow movements for an unwritten violin concerto.
Chamber Music
Beethoven wrote ten sonatas for violin and piano, of which the
"Spring" and the "Kreutzer" are particular favourites with
audiences. He extended very considerably the possibilities of the string
quartet, even with his first, Opus 18 set of quartets, but it is
possibly the named quartets, the group of three dedicated to Prince Razumovsky
and known, therefore, as the Razumovsky Quartets, Opus 59, that are best known.
The later string quartets offer great challenges to both players and audience,
and include the remarkable Grosse Fuge (Great Fugue) a gigantic work, discarded
as the final movement of the String Quartet, Opus 130, and published
separately. Other chamber music includes a number of Trios for violin, cello
and piano, with the "Archduke" Trio pre-eminent and the
"Ghost" Trio a close runner-up, for very different reasons. The Cello
Sonatas and sets of Variations for cello and piano, including one set based on
Handel's See here the conquering hero comes and others on operatic themes from
Mozart, are a valuable part of any cellist's repertoire. Chamber music with
wind instruments and piano include a Quintet, Op. 16, for piano, oboe,
clarinet, horn and bassoon.
Piano Music
Beethoven's 32 numbered piano sonatas make full use of the developing
form of piano, with its wider range and possibilities of dynamic contrast.
There are also interesting sets of variations, including a set based on God
save the King and another on Rule, Britannia, variations on a theme from the
Eroica Symphony and a major work based on a theme by the publisher Diabelli.
The best known of the sonatas are those that have earned themselves
affectionate nicknames, the Pathأƒئ’أ‚آ©tique, Op. 13, Moonlight, Op. 27/2, Waldstein, Op. 53, Appassionata, Op. 57, Les Adieux,
Op. 81a, and the Hammerklavier, Op. 106. Less substantial piano pieces include
three sets of Bagatelles, and the all too well known Fأƒâ€¦أ‚آ¸r Elise, with the Rondo a capriccio, known in English
as Rage over a Lost Penny.
Dance Music
Famous composers like Haydn and Mozart were also employed in the
practical business of providing dance music for court and social occasions.
Beethoven wrote a number of sets of Minuets, German Dances and Contredanses,
ending with the so-called Mأƒئ’أ‚آ¶dlinger Dances, written for performers at a
neighbouring inn during a summer holiday outside Vienna
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