Does anyone know when and how Beethoven decided to put the slow movement of the ninth third?
It seems to have been very, very rare. Haydn debatedly put the slow movement third in symphony no.68 (?1774/5 pub ?1778), but Grove indicates that this ordering of the second and third movements of no.68 is disputed. He had put a slow movement third a couple of times before, but never did it subsequently. I have looked for other examples in Mozart (all the numbered symphonies via Wikipedia), Méhul (the four that he published), Beethoven and Ries, and a few others I have by Vanhal, the Stamitz brothers, Clementi, Weber and early Spohr. Not exhaustive, but a fair-sized sample, and I have found not one instance of a slow third movement between Haydn's disputed 68th and, 48 years later, in quick succession, Ries's 6th and Beethoven's 9th.
(Of course, after the 9th appeared, every man and his dog bar Schubert started putting slow movements third.)
Three possibilities: (1) slow third movements before 1822 were commoner than I realise; (2) Ries 7 and Beethoven 9 was an extraordinary co-incidence; (3) it was not a co-incidence.
If there was a connection, it could have been either way. Ries's 6th was in London but was reported in detail in Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung just before Beethoven started serious work on the ninth that autumn; on the other hand, he had been toying with ideas for the ninth for quite a while, and could have mentioned some of them in a letter to Ries before Ries finished the 6th?
As an aside -- Beethoven promised the dedication of the ninth to Ries, although in the event `realpolitik' sent it to the King of Prussia.
It seems to have been very, very rare. Haydn debatedly put the slow movement third in symphony no.68 (?1774/5 pub ?1778), but Grove indicates that this ordering of the second and third movements of no.68 is disputed. He had put a slow movement third a couple of times before, but never did it subsequently. I have looked for other examples in Mozart (all the numbered symphonies via Wikipedia), Méhul (the four that he published), Beethoven and Ries, and a few others I have by Vanhal, the Stamitz brothers, Clementi, Weber and early Spohr. Not exhaustive, but a fair-sized sample, and I have found not one instance of a slow third movement between Haydn's disputed 68th and, 48 years later, in quick succession, Ries's 6th and Beethoven's 9th.
(Of course, after the 9th appeared, every man and his dog bar Schubert started putting slow movements third.)
Three possibilities: (1) slow third movements before 1822 were commoner than I realise; (2) Ries 7 and Beethoven 9 was an extraordinary co-incidence; (3) it was not a co-incidence.
If there was a connection, it could have been either way. Ries's 6th was in London but was reported in detail in Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung just before Beethoven started serious work on the ninth that autumn; on the other hand, he had been toying with ideas for the ninth for quite a while, and could have mentioned some of them in a letter to Ries before Ries finished the 6th?
As an aside -- Beethoven promised the dedication of the ninth to Ries, although in the event `realpolitik' sent it to the King of Prussia.
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