I have read something I don't understand and can't find the material that might clarify it. Can anyone help?
In Schindler's Life of Beethoven, we find (pp.177-178 of the Moscheles translation), re Ries's Abschieds-concert von England: "Beethoven was so singularly displeased with this work, that he addressed a fulminating letter to the editor of the Leipzig Musikalische Zeitung, wherein he enjoins Ries no longer to call himself his pupil." Schindler went on to say that he (and others) persuaded "the enraged master to refrain from any further demonstration of his displeasure."
Now, I know that The Life of Beethoven could well be subtitled How Important I, Anton Schindler, Was to the Great Master and How All His Other Friends Were Cads, Cheats and Rotters, and that Schindler had an especial down on Ries, but even so ... given that he cited an entry in a widely-read publication, there was presumably something on which he based the story? (even if we can disregard the discredited Schindler's "fulminating" and "enraged"). What on earth was the matter with the concerto? What had B actually written?
Photo-scans of Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung are available at www.digitale-sammlungen.de, and I had a go at locating the "fulminating letter" in the issues from 1824 to 1827, but failed. I don't speak German, the search engine was working on an OCR version and therefore liable to miss things, and I couldn't realistically look through nearly 2,000 scanned pages the hard way (and it might stretch my download limit).
Does anyone know what, if anything, caused (or might have caused) B's displeasure, and whether his displeasure was anything like as great as Schindler wanted us to believe?
In Schindler's Life of Beethoven, we find (pp.177-178 of the Moscheles translation), re Ries's Abschieds-concert von England: "Beethoven was so singularly displeased with this work, that he addressed a fulminating letter to the editor of the Leipzig Musikalische Zeitung, wherein he enjoins Ries no longer to call himself his pupil." Schindler went on to say that he (and others) persuaded "the enraged master to refrain from any further demonstration of his displeasure."
Now, I know that The Life of Beethoven could well be subtitled How Important I, Anton Schindler, Was to the Great Master and How All His Other Friends Were Cads, Cheats and Rotters, and that Schindler had an especial down on Ries, but even so ... given that he cited an entry in a widely-read publication, there was presumably something on which he based the story? (even if we can disregard the discredited Schindler's "fulminating" and "enraged"). What on earth was the matter with the concerto? What had B actually written?
Photo-scans of Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung are available at www.digitale-sammlungen.de, and I had a go at locating the "fulminating letter" in the issues from 1824 to 1827, but failed. I don't speak German, the search engine was working on an OCR version and therefore liable to miss things, and I couldn't realistically look through nearly 2,000 scanned pages the hard way (and it might stretch my download limit).
Does anyone know what, if anything, caused (or might have caused) B's displeasure, and whether his displeasure was anything like as great as Schindler wanted us to believe?
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