Much is made of the great influence of Haydn and Mozart on the early Beethoven, but to my mind the influence of Clementi and Dussek is just as great if not more so. I am not over familiar with the works of either (bar a few teaching sonatinas), but from looking at examples in the Beethoven companion, the thematic and mood resemblances in many cases are striking, particularly in the early sonatas, but also in other works such as the Eroica - for example the bold opening of the finale is foreshadowed in Clementi as is the variation theme itself.
Clementi's Sonata in F minor Op.13 no.6 (1784) contains a passage in its 1st movt development section that according to the Beethoven companion is so uncharacteristic of either Mozart, Haydn or the 18th century in general but is a typical feature of Beethoven - "the effect of this Clementi sonata, the world, atmosphere and language it presents so graphically, spreads out over the whole of Beethoven's first period, with very few exceptions."
I think it refreshing and far more rewarding than some recent distractions here to be able to look at these very real influences on early Beethoven in more detail.
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'Man know thyself'
Clementi's Sonata in F minor Op.13 no.6 (1784) contains a passage in its 1st movt development section that according to the Beethoven companion is so uncharacteristic of either Mozart, Haydn or the 18th century in general but is a typical feature of Beethoven - "the effect of this Clementi sonata, the world, atmosphere and language it presents so graphically, spreads out over the whole of Beethoven's first period, with very few exceptions."
I think it refreshing and far more rewarding than some recent distractions here to be able to look at these very real influences on early Beethoven in more detail.
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'Man know thyself'
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