Hofrat has raised this topic which I think is of great interest. Beethoven was I think surprisingly well known in some places - in the US for example, an 'overture', which some suggest was actually Beethoven's First or Second Symphony was played at a Charleston gathering in 1805 conducted by Jacob Eckhard. However the accepted first performance of a Beethoven symphony in the US was in the assembly room of Postlethwait's Tavern in Lexington Kentucky in 1817, a Bohemian emigre named Anthony Philip Heinrich led a performance of Beethoven's Symphony No. 1.
England was receptive to Beethoven's music, but it is a sign of the popularity of Italian opera that even Fidelio did not receive a London performance until 1832. France was less favourable after the fiasco of the Paris Eroica performance in 1811 with the 5th symphony not being performed until 1820, but surprisingly the piano music was more popular in Paris than Germany and from 1815 was actively encouraged at the conservatoire.
England was receptive to Beethoven's music, but it is a sign of the popularity of Italian opera that even Fidelio did not receive a London performance until 1832. France was less favourable after the fiasco of the Paris Eroica performance in 1811 with the 5th symphony not being performed until 1820, but surprisingly the piano music was more popular in Paris than Germany and from 1815 was actively encouraged at the conservatoire.
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