Happy New Year to everyone !
I would like to ask opinions on Beethoven's handwriting -
1. It's not uncommon for people to write very roughly when making notes or drafting a letter etc. But in the case of Beethoven his finished manuscripts are often described as being very scruffy/almost impossibly difficult to read etc. Why do you think this was (apparently) often a feature of his scores ?
2. In some cases Beethoven's handwriting on scores appears to have been quite neat because there are several works which have in the past been attributed to Mozart but then (wrongly) to the young Beethoven. For example, KV25a and KV511a were first credited as being works by Mozart in the Koechel list of 1905 before later (wrongly) being attributed to the young Beethoven. Since these manuscripts are not in poor handwriting I can only assume the handwriting of young Beethoven while at Bonn was often almost as neat as that of the young Mozart. But is this correct ?
3. Beethoven is famous for working many, many times on a compositon by making various drafts/versions (sometimes of even a single motif) over a long period of time. Mozart is commonly credited with being able to compose at extraordinary speed and with great precision (though this reputation may not actually be justified). For example the famous story that the boy Mozart wrote by ear the famous Allegri 'Miserere' being sung by the papal choir during his visit to Rome and was later granted an award there for this 'phenomenal feat' does not mention that the work was actually available in Vienna's cathedral years before, having been specially requested as a copy by the Emperor Leopold before Mozart was even born. Thus, Mozart may even have learned it before he went to Rome. Secondly, a version of the 'Miserere' was also specially made at the request of Mozart's music teacher, Padre Martini, who was definitely in posession of it long before Mozart went to hear the papal choir. Thirdly, (contrary to popular belief) Mozart actually heard the piece twice while he was in Rome and did not finish it until after the second hearing, even according to his sister's official version of the story - she herself in Salzburg at the time - and Wolfgang could quite easily have already been fairly familiar with it before performing one of his 'evidences of genius' to further his reputation. The piece itself is actually not a hugely difficult one if one has already some familiarity with a copy. But fourthly, this reputation of Mozart to work phenomenally quickly is contradicted by several facts. When the 'Haffner' serenade was returned to Mozart in Vienna during the early 1780's by his father from Salzburg (which Mozart claims to have written) he admits in his own acknowledgement letter 'I did not remember even a single note of what I wrote'which, if true, is strange since it's composition date is less than 6 months beforehand.
To compose a major work quickly and to arrange it for orchestra are two quite different things. I personally think Beethoven was as able to write fast as Mozart in certain respects. The very fact that Beethoven's writing is less neat than that of Mozart does not prove anything by itself. (Errors are quite common in Mozart manuscripts as are cuts/alterations).
Again, some highly intelligent people have atrocious handwriting. (Doctors for example are famed for their poor handwriting in making prescriptions for a pharmacist).
And there are some who claim that the character of a person can be determined by the way in which they write. I've not personally read any such analysis of Beethoven's handwriting. Has anyone here ?
Regards
Robert
Comment