I've always been interested in Schubert's relationship with Beethoven, or, more accurately, lack of one. He died the year after Beethoven died, and was his pallbearer, I believe, but why wasn't there more contact between the two? Schubert worshipped the ground B. walked on, so I'm told. There are stories of Schubert sitting in a tavern at a table near B., trying to work up the nerve to go up and talk to him, or something. How strange that a fellow composer would be so circumspect.
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Beethoven and Schubert
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Originally posted by Serge:
I've always been interested in Schubert's relationship with Beethoven (...)
[This message has been edited by Luis (edited 11-15-2000).]Buy this before saying you don't like Mahler:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000001G96/qid=983416747/sr=1-1/ref=sc_m_1/104-8436844-5169509
You'll thank me later...
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It is indeed strange that living in the same city there wasn't more contact between the two - the official line has always been that Schubert was so in awe that in the master's presence it reduced him to a virtual wreck. Schubert could certainly have done with some help in getting his music performed - to my knowledge he only had one public concert in his life-time. Schubert was of course still a young man in his 20's and possibly the syphilis that he was suffering from made him very ashamed - I think there is an entry in the conversation books that refers to Schubert saying he hides himself away.
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'Man know thyself''Man know thyself'
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