What stands out for me more than anything else in comparison to other composers is Beethoven's incredible ability to reinvent himself - he never sounds the same, each work is unique and unlike any other - this is especially true from the middle period on. Any thoughts?
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Beethoven's uniqueness
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This question of "uniqueness" is an interesting one. I've thought about this SO OFTEN!!
Take something like the Piano Concerto No. 1 - even though written after the "2nd". It harks back to Mozart in idiom but what about that "tico-tico" rhythm in the third movement?!! Even though Mozart had used "Turkish" rhythms in Sonata K330, for example, there'd never been anything like a Latin-style syncopated main theme in European art music when Beethoven tried it and it works magnificently in the 3rd movement. The first movement subjects are both lyrical and beautiful too, but there is an additional element and I think this is a kind of "thundering" (for want of a better work) power which departs from the "grace" and "charm" of Mozart and moves the sonata into newer territory. (I don't want to suggest that Mozart didn't have power, poignancy and drama -it certainly did, but these were "contained", if you will.) Beethoven speaks more DIRECTLY to me, that's all.
It's sad to think that Mozart couldn't "evolve" further because of his very early death. Beethoven lived long enough and was a sufficiently intellectual composer to break new ground. Again, the effect (for me) has been a MORE DIRECT appeal to the senses, particularly those "desert island" middle to late period piano sonatas. There is nothing like them in all of music, to my mind. Twenty five years ago I would never have believed that the pattern of a few notes could be listened to and re-understood again and again and again - not to mention "interpretation". They yield surprises constantly. The is the joy for me - I never feel "over-familiarized" with Beethoven. As Bernstein said, he knew exactly the right note to come next.
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Originally posted by Peter View PostWhat stands out for me more than anything else in comparison to other composers is Beethoven's incredible ability to reinvent himself - he never sounds the same, each work is unique and unlike any other - this is especially true from the middle period on. Any thoughts?
But he is definitely not the only one composer to do so: Stravinsky is in that respect an immediately comparable composer, who did re-invent himself actually more thoroughly than Beethoven did, and who did influence the musical world around him in a similar way.
DesPrez, Telemann, CPE Bach, Janacek and Bartok are other examples
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Unfortunately, I am quite thoughtless. I have never thought of the diversity of Beethoven. Now that you mention it, the diversity and style of almost each piece does seem quite different- even to my feeble ears. What you said about the middle period and the late when compared to the early, does seem right. The earlier works do have a sound which makes them sound kind of similar when compared with the works of the middle period on. Yet, after the early period- the diversity is astounding.
I imagine it would be rare for a composer to write music with such diversity, although I do not know? I mean, starting with the 3rd symphony and all the way to the 9th, every single symphony has a completely different sound, and I do believe that almost all the other genres do too! It is like each work has a different soul.Last edited by Preston; 03-01-2010, 05:23 AM.- I hope, or I could not live. - written by H.G. Wells
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Originally posted by Roehre View PostBeethoven re-invented himself time and again, even within the different periods of his creative live (and IMO was about to enter a new phase in that respect - see the differences between opus 135 and Finale opus 130 compared with the other late quartets e.g.).
But he is definitely not the only one composer to do so: Stravinsky is in that respect an immediately comparable composer, who did re-invent himself actually more thoroughly than Beethoven did, and who did influence the musical world around him in a similar way.
DesPrez, Telemann, CPE Bach, Janacek and Bartok are other examples
Stravinsky is a strange case in that it is his early works that have had the most impact - the early ballets. I'm not saying he didn't go on from there and produce fine works, but nothing that had the impact of the Rite of Spring.'Man know thyself'
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Originally posted by Peter View PostWhat stands out for me more than anything else in comparison to other composers is Beethoven's incredible ability to reinvent himself - he never sounds the same, each work is unique and unlike any other - this is especially true from the middle period on. Any thoughts?
I wonder if this has partly to do with Beethoven only writing what he really wanted to. He accepted commissions, of course, but he was a freelance composer, never with a permanent employer, and in addition wrote less works than Mozart (who lived a much shorter life) and Haydn. And with Mozart and Haydn, you see pieces that, while very good, do not necessarily stand out much. Of course, when you write over 100 symphonies, that is to be expected. On the other hand, I would have said the same thing about 32 piano sonatas. And yet...each of those 32 is unique and the loss of even one would be significant. So while being completely independent certainly allowed Beethoven the luxury of this uniqueness, it was something more in him that actually accomplished it.
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Originally posted by Preston View PostI imagine it would be rare for a composer to write music with such diversity, although I do not know? I mean, starting with the 3rd symphony and all the way to the 9th, every single symphony has a completely different sound, and I do believe that almost all the other genres do too! It is like each work has a different soul.
Basil Lam has this to say: "Some composers have never surpassed the finest works of their first maturity, others have improved beyond reasonable expectation in style and feeling, but what is unique to Beethoven is the unhurried, calm progression, in so many genres, from perfect early works to not less perfect deeper ones which never invalidate or supersede their predecessors."
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Originally posted by Sorrano View PostYet, with all the uniqueness, the music he composed is recognizable as being his; there is an element common to all of his works.
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You're quite right, Phillip 2! What I really meant was Latin rhythms in a symphony or concerto to that point in time. Yes, there is a significant Spanish influence in earlier music - for example, the suite. But I suggest this is not as "idiosyncratic" as the appearance of that "tico-tico" (if you will) in the middle of a Beethoven concerto!! I adore it, BTW. In fact, his piano concerto No. 1 is an all-time fave.
Stockhausen!? Tell us more.
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Excellent question, Phil. Musical "fingerprints" are so obvious, yet so inexplicable in many ways. Yesterday I was listening to Elgar's "Introduction and Allegro" with my (non-musical) husband. I said that, on first acquaintance, once could say it was Dvorak that we were hearing but that it would shortly become obvious that it had "Elgar's fingerprints" all over it. I tried to explain what this meant and crudely suggested it was his soaring, noble melody line reminiscent of your basic "Pomp and Circumstance" or the symphonies. But that, somehow, didn't seem like an adequate explanation. LvB's fingerprints are unique and I tend to think it has something to do with the explosive passion and temperament of some of the work, but also his chord and harmonic progressions. You could play a "Beethoven chord", for example, and smile knowingly to yourself (like a mad relation?).
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Originally posted by PhilipTo answer the question - several. Roeher has mentioned some composers (see above) who have 'reinvented' themselves; I would add one more : Stockhausen. Why? Because he never sounds the same, each of his works is unique and really quite unlike any other.'Man know thyself'
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Originally posted by Peter View PostSorry to be pedantic but it is disrespectful to get the spelling of a name wrong - 'Roehre' (see above). Yes I'd agree with your appraisal of Stockhausen.
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