Anyone else have a fascination for the way B writes for the timpani? Any old music juggler can smash the kettles on I and V, but Beethoven is very creative with this instrument.
In his later symphonies he even goes away from the standard practice of tuning the drums in the tonic and dominant. Was he the first to do this?
Some examples:
In the 5th symphony's slow movement in Ab, the timpani are in C and G:
- The ABABA pattern has a soft A and a loud B - makes sense to tune the drums to the B section, which is in C rather than Ab.
- A good reminder of the symphony's overall key of C.
- The C provides a nice major third to punctuate the Ab stuff occasionally.
7th symphony, scherzo in F: Timpani are (unless my ears deceive me) in F and low A.
- Plays the repeating F-A motive (but inverted to a descending sixth instead of a rising third)
- The trio is in D, where the low A provides the huge "pa-paaa, pa-paaa" drum roll on the dominant.
9th symphony, scherzo in D minor: Timpani are in F an octave apart.
- The octave corresponds to the main motive.
- F is the relative major key, used in the second subject.
- The whole 9th is built on tension between the major and minor modes, so hammering down the minor 3rd is quite an effective way of saying who's boss.
Any other interesting examples?
In his later symphonies he even goes away from the standard practice of tuning the drums in the tonic and dominant. Was he the first to do this?
Some examples:
In the 5th symphony's slow movement in Ab, the timpani are in C and G:
- The ABABA pattern has a soft A and a loud B - makes sense to tune the drums to the B section, which is in C rather than Ab.
- A good reminder of the symphony's overall key of C.
- The C provides a nice major third to punctuate the Ab stuff occasionally.
7th symphony, scherzo in F: Timpani are (unless my ears deceive me) in F and low A.
- Plays the repeating F-A motive (but inverted to a descending sixth instead of a rising third)
- The trio is in D, where the low A provides the huge "pa-paaa, pa-paaa" drum roll on the dominant.
9th symphony, scherzo in D minor: Timpani are in F an octave apart.
- The octave corresponds to the main motive.
- F is the relative major key, used in the second subject.
- The whole 9th is built on tension between the major and minor modes, so hammering down the minor 3rd is quite an effective way of saying who's boss.
Any other interesting examples?
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