Please correct me if I am wrong.
I think Beethoven left school when he was 12 and that his school years were unremarkable, he could not further his studies due to his parents poor financial status.
The idea that he was an untutored native genius has to be rejected I think, he was reasonably well educated, if self educated, I understand that he could speak and write French and he must obviously have know Italian to some extent because all the musical notations were Italian. He was interested in politics and read quite widely on the subject and was fascinated amongst other things in the English system of parliamentary democracy. What he couldn't get his head around was the way that the English managed to reconcile a monarchy to some extent with a democracy, because in Europe, all the monarchies were absolute and of course one of the reasons for the French Revolution was an explosion in popular democracy. But he also lived long enough so see the hopes of that new dawn crushed in the new absolutism of Napolean.
There are some deep areas on Beethoven's own philosophy and what he got from the thinking of Kant and how he saw that relating to his music and the world around him. But that would need a whole new thread to discuss.
I think Beethoven left school when he was 12 and that his school years were unremarkable, he could not further his studies due to his parents poor financial status.
The idea that he was an untutored native genius has to be rejected I think, he was reasonably well educated, if self educated, I understand that he could speak and write French and he must obviously have know Italian to some extent because all the musical notations were Italian. He was interested in politics and read quite widely on the subject and was fascinated amongst other things in the English system of parliamentary democracy. What he couldn't get his head around was the way that the English managed to reconcile a monarchy to some extent with a democracy, because in Europe, all the monarchies were absolute and of course one of the reasons for the French Revolution was an explosion in popular democracy. But he also lived long enough so see the hopes of that new dawn crushed in the new absolutism of Napolean.
There are some deep areas on Beethoven's own philosophy and what he got from the thinking of Kant and how he saw that relating to his music and the world around him. But that would need a whole new thread to discuss.
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