Originally posted by v russo:
Thanks for the support, I was getting ganged up there for a while for expressing my views on this concerto. I think Beethoven was always heartfelt, but was cautious and subtley introduced new ideas in the manner you described. Thats why a radical work like the Op. 95 quartet was said to have been for "private gatherings" only. Beethoven was cautious of his career and did not want to "shock" his audencies too much. Your example of the 3rd symphony is excellent! But, on occasion, I believe he did succumb to financial, social or critical pressures and did compose in a more "safe" manner (ex. the 5th concerto and the replacement movement to the Grosse Fuge). Anyone who knows music and more importantly Beethovens music, can not tell me truthfully that this concerto fits in with B's compositional agenda; both in the sense of personal growth and time period. That is just a plain un-truth.
Thanks for the support, I was getting ganged up there for a while for expressing my views on this concerto. I think Beethoven was always heartfelt, but was cautious and subtley introduced new ideas in the manner you described. Thats why a radical work like the Op. 95 quartet was said to have been for "private gatherings" only. Beethoven was cautious of his career and did not want to "shock" his audencies too much. Your example of the 3rd symphony is excellent! But, on occasion, I believe he did succumb to financial, social or critical pressures and did compose in a more "safe" manner (ex. the 5th concerto and the replacement movement to the Grosse Fuge). Anyone who knows music and more importantly Beethovens music, can not tell me truthfully that this concerto fits in with B's compositional agenda; both in the sense of personal growth and time period. That is just a plain un-truth.
It isn't a question of ganging up! I simply find your arguments odd - on the one hand you accuse Beethoven of having written a 'courtly' concerto that looks back rather than forward, then you say it influenced the Romantic composers which it did - opening with a cadenza is a foreshadowing of Brahms, not an imitation of Mozart. Its sheer drama, power and grandeur with moments such as that incredible double octave passage in the development where the piano angrily challenges the orchestra would have shocked all those dozing courtly powdered wigs!
I think your points are more relevant to Op.19.
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'Man know thyself'
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