Would it be correct to say that both JS Bach and Beethoven belong to a very small group of composers who never saw the sea ?
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Did Beethoven ever see the Sea ?
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Originally posted by robert newman:
Would it be correct to say that both JS Bach and Beethoven belong to a very small group of composers who never saw the sea ?
Of course he did see the C in works such as the first symphony.....
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Originally posted by Nightklavier:
I think Glazunov's Symphonic Poem "The Sea" stands shoulder-to-shoulder as a rival, too, and especially if it's played on two pianos.
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'Man know thyself''Man know thyself'
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I think Mendelssohn's Hebrides overture does it more for me, I can actually visualise and feel the spray and the crash of the waves. Vaughan Williams Sea Symphony is also good like that and just about everything by Benjamin Britten has a salt tang to it, with Billy Budd of course being pre eminent. And then of course no Brit of a certain age can hear the theme from Katchaturian's Spartacus without thinking of the Onedin Line!.....
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Beethoven the Man!Beethoven the Man!
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Good question HadynFan. Schubert of course visited Hungary near the end of his life though Hungary has no ports. He could not have seen the sea from there. Despite this I note in passing that Hungary is today (bizzarely) being prosecuted by the European Community for failing to implement a number of European Directives on Maritime Safety ! She (like landlocked Slovakia) are liable for hefty fines (the argument being that the flag of both countries is used on some ships worldwide). Long live the Swiss Navy !
(Guess Schubert must join Beethoven and Bach in this little club of landlocked great composers).
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Originally posted by Peter:
Possibly he saw the North Sea on his trip in 1781 to Rotterdam? On another note Debussy's La Mer has to be the greatest evocation of the ocean!
Fidelio
Must it be.....it must be
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If Beethoven travelled to Holland in late 1783 with his mother it would be very interesting to see who was left to run the church music and the ordinary teaching of music at Bonn chapel during that time. Those missing from their normal posts at Bonn during 1783 would therefore seem to have included -
1. Ch.G Neefe (travelling with the theatre group attached to Bonn chapel)
2. Ludwig van Beethoven (in Holland) ?
3. Kapellmeister Luchesi (definitely on 1 year extended leave in Italy)
4. G.Mattioli - Orchestral Leader/First Violin (definitely also in Italy)
To say that this would have thrown the chapel music in to some confusion seems to be something of an understatement. Perhaps this caused a rift with the Kapellmeister when he and Mattioli returned in early 1784 ?
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Originally posted by robert newman:
If Beethoven travelled to Holland in late 1783 with his mother it would be very interesting to see who was left to run the church music and the ordinary teaching of music at Bonn chapel during that time. Those missing from their normal posts at Bonn during 1783 would therefore seem to have included -
1. Ch.G Neefe (travelling with the theatre group attached to Bonn chapel)
2. Ludwig van Beethoven (in Holland) ?
3. Kapellmeister Luchesi (definitely on 1 year extended leave in Italy)
4. G.Mattioli - Orchestral Leader/First Violin (definitely also in Italy)
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Originally posted by robert newman:
If Beethoven travelled to Holland in late 1783 with his mother it would be very interesting to see who was left to run the church music and the ordinary teaching of music at Bonn chapel during that time. Those missing from their normal posts at Bonn during 1783 would therefore seem to have included -
1. Ch.G Neefe (travelling with the theatre group attached to Bonn chapel)
2. Ludwig van Beethoven (in Holland) ?
3. Kapellmeister Luchesi (definitely on 1 year extended leave in Italy)
4. G.Mattioli - Orchestral Leader/First Violin (definitely also in Italy)
To say that this would have thrown the chapel music in to some confusion seems to be something of an understatement. Perhaps this caused a rift with the Kapellmeister when he and Mattioli returned in early 1784 ?
Fidelio
Must it be.....it must be
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Dear Fidelio,
You suggest that after June 1783 Beethoven 'returned to composing'. I wonder if you might share evidence of Beethoven being credited in Bonn as a composer prior to June 1783 ? He is certainly not described as a composer in the court records of the following year, 1784. Or are you assuming he had written the funeral cantata for George Cressner by that date (perhaps ?)
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Originally posted by robert newman:
Dear Fidelio,
You suggest that after June 1783 Beethoven 'returned to composing'. I wonder if you might share evidence of Beethoven being credited in Bonn as a composer prior to June 1783 ? He is certainly not described as a composer in the court records of the following year, 1784. Or are you assuming he had written the funeral cantata for George Cressner by that date (perhaps ?)
The three piano sonatas, WoO 47 were published by Bossler in Speyer in October, 1783.
Fidelio
Must it be.....it must be
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