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Beethoven music SOLD!!!

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    Beethoven music SOLD!!!

    from the wires. The internet is AMAZING:

    Beethoven Manuscript Sells for $1.72M http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20051201/...n_manuscript_4

    LONDON - A working manuscript of Ludwig van Beethoven's "Grosse Fuge" sold for $1.72 million to an anonymous buyer, Sotheby's auctioneers said.

    Sotheby's described the manuscript, discovered in a Pennsylvania seminary library, as "an astounding and important discovery" and possibly the most substantial manuscript of a Beethoven work to come up for sale in more than a century.

    The buyer, who bid by telephone, paid $1.95 million, including the buyers' premium, Sotheby's said. It declined to say where the buyer was based.

    "The manuscript was only known from a brief description in a catalogue in 1890 and it has never before been seen or described by Beethoven scholars," said Stephen Roe, head of Sotheby's manuscript department.

    "Its rediscovery will allow a complete reassessment of this extraordinary music."

    The 80-page manuscript is a piano duet version (opus 134) of the last movement of Beethoven's string quartet in B flat (opus 130), which was first performed in 1826, a year before his death.

    The "Grosse Fuge," composed as part of a commission from Prince Nikolay Golitsin of St. Petersburg, was originally published as the finale of the string quartet.

    Because players found the music so difficult the publisher asked for a simpler version, and the "Grosse Fuge" was then published separately (opus 133).

    The piano manuscript was rediscovered earlier this year by librarian Heather Carbo at the Palmer Theological Seminary in Wynnewood, Pa., just outside Philadelphia's city limits.

    The manuscript is full of clues to Beethoven's composition process. It is written in brown and black ink, sometimes over pencil and includes later annotations in pencil and red crayon. There is evidence of deletions, corrections, deep erasures, smudged alterations and several pages pasted over the original.

    "The extent of Beethoven's working and reworking on the manuscript suggests that the composer accorded it great significance and leads to the suggestion that he may have given the four-hand version equal standing with the better-known quartet version," Sotheby's catalogue said.

    University of Pennsylvania musicologist Jeffrey Kallberg, who authenticated the manuscript, said it was in pristine condition because it has not been touched or moved for so many decades.

    "It's a very important discovery," he said. "This was a controversial and not understood work because it was so ahead of its time. It sounds like it was written by a dissonant 20th century composer."

    The manuscript was last mentioned in an 1890 auction catalog from Berlin. The buyer is not documented, but seminary officials believe it was industrialist and composer William Howard Doane.

    His daughter, Marguerite Treat Doane, in 1950 donated a collection of documents, including musical manuscripts that likely included the Beethoven, to pay for construction of a chapel.

    "In all the Beethoven literature, it's described as lost," said Roe. "There are lots of alterations, changes, revisions that no one has ever seen."

    It was the second major musical discovery at the seminary, which is part of Eastern University.

    Manuscripts by Mozart, Haydn, Strauss, Meyerbeer and Spohr, also given by Doane, were found in a safe in 1990.

    The proceeds from the sale of the "Grosse Fuge" will be used to pay the seminary's debts, build up the scholarship program and expand programs, the school said.

    On the Net:
    http://www.palmerseminary.edu
    http://www.sothebys.com

    [This message has been edited by Classy_The_Virgin (edited 12-02-2005).]

    #2
    1 question,1 comment:

    1. I wsa taught --from my days of being in the marching band that orchestra players were the best/crem of the crop/best tecnical instrumental players in the world--->if you were in a orchestra you were the very []best[/b]. Do you think that b/c B had hearning problems that he didnt know HOW hard his stuff was for OTHER people who had to play it? Is that why a lot of the orchestras didnt want to play his music? B/c it was TO technical for them?

    2. How does someone buy music that is historical? so if someone had the money to by the Declartion of Independence they can just buy it? Doenst make sense to me.

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by Classy_The_Virgin:
      Do you think that b/c B had hearning problems that he didnt know HOW hard his stuff was for OTHER people who had to play it? Is that why a lot of the orchestras didnt want to play his music? B/c it was TO technical for them?
      Well it was hard, and it wasn't that Beethoven did not know it, it was just that he did not care. Beethoven was an expert musician - a virtuoso pianist - and he played other instruments as well. He was a master of his craft and he knew perfectly well the capabilites and limitations of the instruments of the orchestra. Hearing would have nothing to do with this. And besides, Beethoven didn't lose his hearing until well into adulthood anyway.

      He did not care, because he knew what he wanted, and if the musicians had to overcome certain technical difficulties, they would just have to do it.

      Supposedly his friend, the violinist Schuppanzigh complained of the difficulty of something Beethoven had written, and Beethoven had made the comment: "Does he believe that I think of a wretched fiddle when the spirit speaks to me?"

      2. How does someone buy music that is historical? so if someone had the money to by the Declartion of Independence they can just buy it? Doenst make sense to me.
      Well, if you have something, it is surely your right to sell it. Obviously you cannot buy the Declaration of Independence, because the U.S. government is not going to sell it. (Then again, they say you can get anything if you're willing to pay enough.) Obviously we would like to see these valuable pieces of musical history in museums and such, but the rightful owners can do with them as they wish.

      Comment


        #4
        Beethoven was an expert musician - a virtuoso pianist - and he played other instruments as well.
        what else did he play?
        *~Ja, was haben's da scho wieder gmacht, Beethoven?~*

        Comment


          #5
          Originally posted by Anthina:
          what else did he play?
          In his youth, Organ and Viola.

          ------------------
          'Man know thyself'
          'Man know thyself'

          Comment

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