I'm researching 2 programs for community FM radio that I'm presenting on Beethoven. Currently I'm reading Solomon's most recent study from this eponymously titled book. Something of interest aroused my curiosity and I would like to run it by anybody on these boards who feels equipped to discuss, and I quote as follows:
"His Bonn compositions rarely penetrate the surface of the emotions, perhaps because they correspond so harmoniously with the ideal of the benevolent principality in which they were created: an untroubled aestheticism that exalted abstract beauty and found pleasure in the predictable repetition of graceful patterns and forms"(p.67).
I don't think we should accept this as a mere throw-away line from Solomon. Firstly, how does music 'penetrate the surface of the emotions'? Examples would be useful!
Secondly, Solomon seems to be suggesting that classical music, per se, 'exalts' abstract beauty...through 'predictable repetition of graceful patterns and forms'. That makes it sound rather superficial. I'm wondering what you think he means by this.
Lastly, what could be the (musical) ideal of the 'benevolent principality'?
"His Bonn compositions rarely penetrate the surface of the emotions, perhaps because they correspond so harmoniously with the ideal of the benevolent principality in which they were created: an untroubled aestheticism that exalted abstract beauty and found pleasure in the predictable repetition of graceful patterns and forms"(p.67).
I don't think we should accept this as a mere throw-away line from Solomon. Firstly, how does music 'penetrate the surface of the emotions'? Examples would be useful!
Secondly, Solomon seems to be suggesting that classical music, per se, 'exalts' abstract beauty...through 'predictable repetition of graceful patterns and forms'. That makes it sound rather superficial. I'm wondering what you think he means by this.
Lastly, what could be the (musical) ideal of the 'benevolent principality'?
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