Have you all seen this site?
http://www.keepingscore.org/flash/beethoven/index.html
Rather fun, all in all. Plenty of interactivity with Flash & script. Be sure to watch the various videos embedded in certain pages.
One of the joys of reading of Beethoven's life is the inadvertent comedy in so many anecdotes stemming from the troubled & troublesome aspects of Our Boy's personality & idiosyncrasies. My favorite laugh here is the page BEETHOVEN MAKES A GOOD LIVING under PATRONAGE. The site relates what Seyfried had to say about being a page-turner for Beethoven at one of his benefit concerts:
"But--heaven help me!--that was easier said than done. I saw almost nothing but empty leaves; at the most on one page or the other a few Egyptian hieroglyphs wholly unintelligible to me scribbled down to serve as clues for him; for he played nearly all of the solo part from memory, since, as was so often the case, he had not had time to put it all down on paper. He gave me a secret glance whenever he was at the end of one of the invisible passages & my scarcely concealable anxiety not to miss the decisive moment amused him greatly."
That casual "invisible passages" is a hoot, & the reference to Egyptian hieroglyphs is priceless. I about died with laughter when I was reading that.
It's so ... Beethoven.
http://www.keepingscore.org/flash/beethoven/index.html
Rather fun, all in all. Plenty of interactivity with Flash & script. Be sure to watch the various videos embedded in certain pages.
One of the joys of reading of Beethoven's life is the inadvertent comedy in so many anecdotes stemming from the troubled & troublesome aspects of Our Boy's personality & idiosyncrasies. My favorite laugh here is the page BEETHOVEN MAKES A GOOD LIVING under PATRONAGE. The site relates what Seyfried had to say about being a page-turner for Beethoven at one of his benefit concerts:
"But--heaven help me!--that was easier said than done. I saw almost nothing but empty leaves; at the most on one page or the other a few Egyptian hieroglyphs wholly unintelligible to me scribbled down to serve as clues for him; for he played nearly all of the solo part from memory, since, as was so often the case, he had not had time to put it all down on paper. He gave me a secret glance whenever he was at the end of one of the invisible passages & my scarcely concealable anxiety not to miss the decisive moment amused him greatly."
That casual "invisible passages" is a hoot, & the reference to Egyptian hieroglyphs is priceless. I about died with laughter when I was reading that.
It's so ... Beethoven.
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