The Cenotaph broadcast this morning was the usual moving occasion, but what is that Beethoven march they always play (in B flat?) while the wreaths are being layed? I know I should know, but I don't.
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Originally posted by Peter:
Well I didn't watch it, but could it have been the Funeral March from the sonata in Ab Op.26?
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Originally posted by PDG:
The Cenotaph broadcast this morning was the usual moving occasion, but what is that Beethoven march they always play (in B flat?) while the wreaths are being layed? I know I should know, but I don't.
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"If I were but of noble birth..." - Rod Corkin
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Originally posted by Rod:
Considering he only wrote two such marches the choice should not be a difficult one. But I do not recall hearing a Beethoven funeral march at such occasions.
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Originally posted by PDG:
Curiouser and curiouser. The march has been played every year for at least the last 15 (I always watch The Cenotaph). It has always been credited to Beethoven, and indeed, sounds very Beethovenian. It is played while the wreaths are being laid, immediately following the two minutes silence.
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Originally posted by PDG:
IT IS NOT, REPEAT NOT, FROM OPUS 26!!!!!
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Originally posted by PDG:
Curiouser and curiouser. The march has been played every year for at least the last 15 (I always watch The Cenotaph). It has always been credited to Beethoven, and indeed, sounds very Beethovenian. It is played while the wreaths are being laid, immediately following the two minutes silence.
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'Man know thyself''Man know thyself'
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Originally posted by PDG:
The Cenotaph broadcast this morning was the usual moving occasion, but what is that Beethoven march they always play (in B flat?) while the wreaths are being layed? I know I should know, but I don't.
The RAF refer to is at Beethoven's Funeral March No 2, No 1 being the arrangement of slow movement from Op 26. They also occasionally play a 'Beethoven Funeral March No 3' (at Churchill's funeral, for example). No-one, not even they, seem to know who wrote that one!
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Originally posted by Sorrano:
Then I suppose if I were to suggest that it was the Funeral March from "Leonore Prohaska" (WoO 96)I would be absolutely wrong inasmuch as it is Beethoven's own orchestration of Opus 26. More seriously, though, does it have to be labeled as a Funeral March? You indicated initally that it was a march in b-flat. Perhaps WoO 2, Triumphal March from "Tarpeja".
Hofrat"Is it not strange that sheep guts should hale souls out of men's bodies?"
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