I'm reading the book "Chronicles of my life" by Igor Stravinski, and in the chapter "postwar years" makes some remarks that I expect you may find not just interesting but also may bring up some debate.
First, the context: 1923, Biarritz, and Stravinski devoted to the composition of his piano sonata (there is a previous piano sonata dated 1905). He explains that, despite the fact that he wanted to compose with the maximum freedom, in the process of composing felt the desire to analyse the sonatas from the classic master to follow their directions and development of ideas as to solve the problems of the sonata form.
He explains that to that purpose played again a large number of Beethoven sonatas. The he says:
"During our youth we were saturated with his works and were imposed at the same time his famous 'weltschmerz', his 'tragedy' and all the cliches that arose a century ago around this composer undoubtly recognized as one of the greatest geniuses of the universe. Like other young musicians, I was disgusted with this cerebral and sentimental attitude distant from a rigurous musical opinion. This regrettable pedagogy drifted me away form Beethoven for many years"
The Stravinski explains how he progressively approached in a more objective way Beethoven and overcame that teaching.
Then he explains his views: "First of all I recognized in him a master of the instrument. The instrument inspired his musical mind and determined the substance"... He says that Beethoven composed piano music, and not music for piano, for instance.
He says that "It is time that Beethoven is rescued from the monopoly that has unfairly appropiated of him, formed by 'intellectuals' and leave it to those who do not seek in music anything but music, and it is also time to protect him against the nonsense and rude comments of the idiots who have fun denigrating him".
Then he underlines that in his symphonies, chamber works and overtures Beethoven dirtributes with great wisdom the papers to each instrument and groups, and that his careful writing and the precision with which he exposes his wishes evidence that we are before a force of constructive order, and that is how he moulds the sonic matter is what allowed him to build the instrumental forms that made him so glorious.
Afterwards Stravinski mentions that the music of Beethoven, tightly linked to his instrumental lenguage, has found in moderation his more concrete and perfect expression, saying that "We have enough shoddy orchestrations and 'thick' sonorities, we are fed up of the timbre, we can't stand the overfeeding of the instrumental element, inflating it exaggeratedly adn thansforming it in something 'by itself'!".
I found very interesting his tone, because this passage of the book sounded to me as a real defense of the figure of Beethoven, which means to me that he found it necessary, perhaps due to the avant-garde circle in which he moved... so I think it's curious how even one of the least disputed geniuses in some circles, depending on the 'trends' may be thrashed out.
First, the context: 1923, Biarritz, and Stravinski devoted to the composition of his piano sonata (there is a previous piano sonata dated 1905). He explains that, despite the fact that he wanted to compose with the maximum freedom, in the process of composing felt the desire to analyse the sonatas from the classic master to follow their directions and development of ideas as to solve the problems of the sonata form.
He explains that to that purpose played again a large number of Beethoven sonatas. The he says:
"During our youth we were saturated with his works and were imposed at the same time his famous 'weltschmerz', his 'tragedy' and all the cliches that arose a century ago around this composer undoubtly recognized as one of the greatest geniuses of the universe. Like other young musicians, I was disgusted with this cerebral and sentimental attitude distant from a rigurous musical opinion. This regrettable pedagogy drifted me away form Beethoven for many years"
The Stravinski explains how he progressively approached in a more objective way Beethoven and overcame that teaching.
Then he explains his views: "First of all I recognized in him a master of the instrument. The instrument inspired his musical mind and determined the substance"... He says that Beethoven composed piano music, and not music for piano, for instance.
He says that "It is time that Beethoven is rescued from the monopoly that has unfairly appropiated of him, formed by 'intellectuals' and leave it to those who do not seek in music anything but music, and it is also time to protect him against the nonsense and rude comments of the idiots who have fun denigrating him".
Then he underlines that in his symphonies, chamber works and overtures Beethoven dirtributes with great wisdom the papers to each instrument and groups, and that his careful writing and the precision with which he exposes his wishes evidence that we are before a force of constructive order, and that is how he moulds the sonic matter is what allowed him to build the instrumental forms that made him so glorious.
Afterwards Stravinski mentions that the music of Beethoven, tightly linked to his instrumental lenguage, has found in moderation his more concrete and perfect expression, saying that "We have enough shoddy orchestrations and 'thick' sonorities, we are fed up of the timbre, we can't stand the overfeeding of the instrumental element, inflating it exaggeratedly adn thansforming it in something 'by itself'!".
I found very interesting his tone, because this passage of the book sounded to me as a real defense of the figure of Beethoven, which means to me that he found it necessary, perhaps due to the avant-garde circle in which he moved... so I think it's curious how even one of the least disputed geniuses in some circles, depending on the 'trends' may be thrashed out.
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