This morning I've been having a conversation with my family about deafness and its impact upon individuals. It is axiomatic that 'deafness' and "Beethoven" go together, but thinking about the issue a little more intensely has thrown up a couple of issues which I thought worth sharing.
Just a quick background: I have a friend who is deaf and I've gradually observed her psychological and cognitive decline as a consequence of this, comparatively recent, handicap. Though I have many times suggested to her that she might get a computer, undertake a course and learn about the internet to mitigate her social isolation she has shown a dogged unwillingness to do this. I have lately developed the view that such stubbornness, depression and inflexibility are all consequences of her disability. Another anecdote I relate, and which is relevant, is that during a Rhine/Danube cruise in 2009 I sat for dinner at a table with an Audiologist and his wife. It happened that we were near Bonn at the time and Beethoven came into the conversation (well, wouldn't he - always??). This man suggested that, since he himself had been deaf since childhood and had found ways of coping, Beethoven would have found coping strategies and wouldn't have felt the handicap nearly as much as generally believed. He further suggested that it had obviously caused Beethoven few compositional challenges. (The man seemed to be speaking from personal experience and the heart, but I cautioned him, "please take care; you are stepping now on dangerous ground as Beethoven is my idol".) After this latter exchange we both fell silent!!
These two anecdotes are relevant and I've tied them to Beethoven and our knowledge of him. Firstly, social isolation as a factor is immense. This would have made Beethoven inward in his thinking, angry, depressed and inflexible. Did all this impact on his compositional skills, therefore? Unquestionably. We know from the last works that he was inward, reflective and intense. The inability to communicate with human beings and, therefore, express his humanity had to be contained within those works to a great degree. In that sense, I feel that counterpoint - particularly in the late string quartets - must have become a "conversational" outlet and metaphor for him. Listening to the 'speaking' of various instruments lead him to the daring nature of those works at the time of their composition. I'm suggesting that his gregarious needs were possibly expressed in and through the very act of composing a 'dialogue' of increasingly complex nature in the form of music. Externally, he was socially isolated and inflexible but in his music he surely was not.
In short, I'm suggesting that deafness was much more significant for Beethoven's creative powers in terms of innovation, growth and development than might otherwise appear. Counterpoint as the conversational trope.
Just a quick background: I have a friend who is deaf and I've gradually observed her psychological and cognitive decline as a consequence of this, comparatively recent, handicap. Though I have many times suggested to her that she might get a computer, undertake a course and learn about the internet to mitigate her social isolation she has shown a dogged unwillingness to do this. I have lately developed the view that such stubbornness, depression and inflexibility are all consequences of her disability. Another anecdote I relate, and which is relevant, is that during a Rhine/Danube cruise in 2009 I sat for dinner at a table with an Audiologist and his wife. It happened that we were near Bonn at the time and Beethoven came into the conversation (well, wouldn't he - always??). This man suggested that, since he himself had been deaf since childhood and had found ways of coping, Beethoven would have found coping strategies and wouldn't have felt the handicap nearly as much as generally believed. He further suggested that it had obviously caused Beethoven few compositional challenges. (The man seemed to be speaking from personal experience and the heart, but I cautioned him, "please take care; you are stepping now on dangerous ground as Beethoven is my idol".) After this latter exchange we both fell silent!!
These two anecdotes are relevant and I've tied them to Beethoven and our knowledge of him. Firstly, social isolation as a factor is immense. This would have made Beethoven inward in his thinking, angry, depressed and inflexible. Did all this impact on his compositional skills, therefore? Unquestionably. We know from the last works that he was inward, reflective and intense. The inability to communicate with human beings and, therefore, express his humanity had to be contained within those works to a great degree. In that sense, I feel that counterpoint - particularly in the late string quartets - must have become a "conversational" outlet and metaphor for him. Listening to the 'speaking' of various instruments lead him to the daring nature of those works at the time of their composition. I'm suggesting that his gregarious needs were possibly expressed in and through the very act of composing a 'dialogue' of increasingly complex nature in the form of music. Externally, he was socially isolated and inflexible but in his music he surely was not.
In short, I'm suggesting that deafness was much more significant for Beethoven's creative powers in terms of innovation, growth and development than might otherwise appear. Counterpoint as the conversational trope.
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