One thing that has always struck me about Beethoven's music is that the choices he made, no matter how much he actually agonized over them, always seem inevitable in the final piece. As if there were no other note that could possibly have come next. I've heard other people make this observation as well.
But sometimes Beethoven does something I don't expect at all, usually by bailing out of something early that I expect to be further explored or exploited. I remembered a prime example yesterday when I was listening to the Leonore "No. 1" overture (actually the third version composed).
[YOUTUBE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pPJvApIUCw0[/YOUTUBE]
Listen to the part from 2:45-3:00. Then go back and listen to the rhythmic figure introduced at 2:51, and how it repeats itself twice for a total of three times, descending in pitch each time. Then immediately after that the figure goes back up to where it started, but it changes a bit with an extra note being added. I expect this altered figure to repeat once or twice here, but instead that's all we ever hear of it and it goes back to the original figure as a transition to a different part, which then leads right into a repeat of the entire part we just heard from 2:45-3:00.
This always surprises me. I expect that little bit to be explored more, but instead it just teases me for a second and moves on. Do you think so, or does this part have the usual Beethoven inevitability to you?
But sometimes Beethoven does something I don't expect at all, usually by bailing out of something early that I expect to be further explored or exploited. I remembered a prime example yesterday when I was listening to the Leonore "No. 1" overture (actually the third version composed).
[YOUTUBE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pPJvApIUCw0[/YOUTUBE]
Listen to the part from 2:45-3:00. Then go back and listen to the rhythmic figure introduced at 2:51, and how it repeats itself twice for a total of three times, descending in pitch each time. Then immediately after that the figure goes back up to where it started, but it changes a bit with an extra note being added. I expect this altered figure to repeat once or twice here, but instead that's all we ever hear of it and it goes back to the original figure as a transition to a different part, which then leads right into a repeat of the entire part we just heard from 2:45-3:00.
This always surprises me. I expect that little bit to be explored more, but instead it just teases me for a second and moves on. Do you think so, or does this part have the usual Beethoven inevitability to you?
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