I was always taught that B was this great liberator of musicians, that before him they had all been enslaved by the church or court and he changed the situation single handidly! - Surely there are several things wrong with this view. Mozart had set out on his own a decade before B settled in Vienna - it was a struggle for him (though he was never the pauper of popular imagination).Indeed had he lived a few more years, he would have known tremendous financial and artistic success. When B arrived on the scene there had been several important social changes in Austria, largely as a result of the liberal reforms of Joseph II and the French Revolutuion. There was no great class barrier - the nobility freely mixed with the lower classes - the Emperor himself moved freely amongst the people in the fashionable parks such as the Prater and with a rising middle class there was great demand for new music. So my point is that B did not create the circumstances whereby a composer was a free agent, he merely took advantage of the conditions that were present at the time. A composer such as Wagner was employed at the Dresden court a good 20 years after the death of Beethoven.
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'Man know thyself'
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