Greetings:
About a decade ago, through the website www.unheardbeethoven.org, I became familiar with Hess 15 - the unfinished piano concerto in D major, which Beethoven started and abandoned in 1815. What he committed to paper - 180 or so bars of a full orchestral score - is in and of itself a significant work, both as music to enjoy, and in its historical context. As one who already knew his published concerti by heart, I found Hess 15 to be a wonderful new discovery.
In the intervening years I've wondered if this work would ever have a future beyond the remarkable midi sequenced version of Nicolas Cook's "performing edition", that is featured on the unheardbeethoven.org site. From an email exchange early on with Professor Cook, there was no reason to be encouraged: he didn't know of any planned efforts to bring the work to wider public attention.
Of course I was fully expecting all this to change last year with the Indentia recording of Hess 15. And yet, even that hasn't seemed to generate any significant new interest or "buzz" that I'm aware of.
My question is this: given that Beethoven is probably the most famous classical composer of all time, and that his piano concerti are among the most studied, most performed and most recorded in the genre, is it reasonable for me to wonder why Hess 15 should not capture the imagination of more people today - beyond a small group of "hard-core" Beethoven or piano concerto afficiandos? Is it destined to remain an obscure work?
Any ideas about this would be most welcome!
About a decade ago, through the website www.unheardbeethoven.org, I became familiar with Hess 15 - the unfinished piano concerto in D major, which Beethoven started and abandoned in 1815. What he committed to paper - 180 or so bars of a full orchestral score - is in and of itself a significant work, both as music to enjoy, and in its historical context. As one who already knew his published concerti by heart, I found Hess 15 to be a wonderful new discovery.
In the intervening years I've wondered if this work would ever have a future beyond the remarkable midi sequenced version of Nicolas Cook's "performing edition", that is featured on the unheardbeethoven.org site. From an email exchange early on with Professor Cook, there was no reason to be encouraged: he didn't know of any planned efforts to bring the work to wider public attention.
Of course I was fully expecting all this to change last year with the Indentia recording of Hess 15. And yet, even that hasn't seemed to generate any significant new interest or "buzz" that I'm aware of.
My question is this: given that Beethoven is probably the most famous classical composer of all time, and that his piano concerti are among the most studied, most performed and most recorded in the genre, is it reasonable for me to wonder why Hess 15 should not capture the imagination of more people today - beyond a small group of "hard-core" Beethoven or piano concerto afficiandos? Is it destined to remain an obscure work?
Any ideas about this would be most welcome!
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