1. ‘A work greater than his greatest symphonies, greater than anything he wrote, and consequently greater than anything ever produced by the art of music’
(Berlioz on a performance by Mme Massart late in 1860 of Beethoven’s 'Appassionata'(Op. 57, in F Minor)
2. 'In the life of an artist thunderclaps sometimes follow each other in quick succession as in great storms, when the clouds, charged with electricity, seem to bounce lightning around and blow up a hurricane. I had just had a double vision of Shakespeare and Weber, when immediately on another point of the horizon I saw the immense figure of Beethoven arise. The shock I received was almost comparable to that from Shakespeare. He opened up a new world in music, just as the poet had unveiled to me a new universe in poetry'. (1837)
3. 'As far as symphonies are concerned, Mozart wrote 17 of which 3 are beautiful and even then the good Haydn produced a quantity of pretty things of that kind. Beethoven wrote 7 masterpieces but Beethoven is not human. And when you are only a human being you should not pass judgement on the god'.
(1862)
4. 'My young and sublime orchestra, we will meet again!… We have great things to do together. There is a musical America, Beethoven was its Colombus, I shall be its Pizarro or Cortez'. (1831)
Comment