Originally posted by Frankli:
If I am right Clementi's early works were widely available - he was a publisher himself - so I bet that Beethoven knew them well. And some years later Breitkopf wrote to Beethoven that they had reprinted most of Clementi's piano works, so they belonged to the standard repertoire.
Besides, Beethoven expressed his admiration for the older composer more than one time, and the influence from Clementi on Beethoven is clear, just like Mozart, Dussek, and many others provided him with ideas for his musical development.
I do agree on op.6 (composed 1 or 2 years after the discussed Clementi sonata) up to a point, though the treatment of the material in the 5th Symphony strikes me much more when compared with Clementi's sonata. It is true that we cannot tell how Beethoven's style would have developed without the influence from Clementi; sometimes people invent the wheel independent from each other.
My (and Picasso's) point about geniuses is that they often "borrow" ideas and motifs from lesser artists, and use them to create something superior with it. No shame if Beethoven, Mozart, and others plagiarized a musical idea here and there; no man is an island, entire of itself!
If I am right Clementi's early works were widely available - he was a publisher himself - so I bet that Beethoven knew them well. And some years later Breitkopf wrote to Beethoven that they had reprinted most of Clementi's piano works, so they belonged to the standard repertoire.
Besides, Beethoven expressed his admiration for the older composer more than one time, and the influence from Clementi on Beethoven is clear, just like Mozart, Dussek, and many others provided him with ideas for his musical development.
I do agree on op.6 (composed 1 or 2 years after the discussed Clementi sonata) up to a point, though the treatment of the material in the 5th Symphony strikes me much more when compared with Clementi's sonata. It is true that we cannot tell how Beethoven's style would have developed without the influence from Clementi; sometimes people invent the wheel independent from each other.
My (and Picasso's) point about geniuses is that they often "borrow" ideas and motifs from lesser artists, and use them to create something superior with it. No shame if Beethoven, Mozart, and others plagiarized a musical idea here and there; no man is an island, entire of itself!
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"If I were but of noble birth..." - Rod Corkin
[This message has been edited by Rod (edited 08-12-2006).]
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