Originally posted by PDG:
What is Beethoven`s greatest symphony? Easy - No.9. And why the greatest? Because it is the summation of his orchestral writing, it was the gateway to the romantic movement, and it symbolizes liberty and free speech; even today.
LET`S MOVE ON, PEOPLE!!
What is Beethoven`s greatest symphony? Easy - No.9. And why the greatest? Because it is the summation of his orchestral writing, it was the gateway to the romantic movement, and it symbolizes liberty and free speech; even today.
LET`S MOVE ON, PEOPLE!!
Frankly I think you are doing Beethoven and the 9th a disservice with this statement, but it is a popular conception of B's place in the history of music. When I hear the 9th I suggest it possesses Classical strength and strucure in abundance, with little hint of romanticism as portrayed by later generations. The 9th is not a gateway to a new (in my opinion lesser) Romantic world, it is the pinnacle of the 'old' world order. For the gateway to Romantisism the 'father' I have always said is Weber. I suggest the Romantics would have been impressed with B's rhetorical style, and this is indicated in the may feeble attempts to immitate it, but it is mixed with a sentiment and form that is a million miles from Beethoven (which is perhaps why the immitation is less effective). Wagner was indeed impressed by Beethoven, but his music sounds far more akin to Webers to me, and almost nothing like Beethovens. I have a video of the excellent film 'Excalibur', which make careful use of Wagner music (careful in that the editor wisely cuts it off before it gets to the awful bombastic moments). A romantic heroic story, but I can't imagine even B's most heroic music would fit naturally in a movie such as this, wheras you could think Wagner wrote the music especially for a movie such as this!
Rod
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"If I were but of noble birth..." - Rod Corkin
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