Originally posted by Cetto von Cronstorff
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Fur Elise
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Getting back to "Fur Elise", I just came across this snippet in Classic FM magazine. I don't know if it's true or absolute rubbish:
Did You Know?
If you use German note names where E flat is written Es (and pronounced "S" as in English), the name "Elise" is revealed in the first few notes of the piece.
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Originally posted by Michael View PostGetting back to "Fur Elise", I just came across this snippet in Classic FM magazine. I don't know if it's true or absolute rubbish:
Did You Know?
If you use German note names where E flat is written Es (and pronounced "S" as in English), the name "Elise" is revealed in the first few notes of the piece.
E D# E D# E B D C A
So, first of all, there aren't even any E flats. You could say the D#s are Ebs, I guess. Then it would be (in the German way of writing it):
E Es E Es E H D C A
So...still no. It's kind of a problem that there aren't any Ls or Is in musical notation, but maybe I'm being too literal. If you take the first three notes:
E Es E
And then pronounce them as if they were a word you...kind of...get something that sounds a little like Elise.
But that's really a stretch.
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Originally posted by Hofrat View PostIf Beethoven intended the title to be "Fur Therese," why are we are we looking for clues in the name "Elise?"
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