Originally posted by Peter:
Bach went one better and used his name as a fugue subject, I don't suppose it's possible with Beethoven!
Bach went one better and used his name as a fugue subject, I don't suppose it's possible with Beethoven!
Also, Alban Berg used not only his own name but the names of his friends Arnold Schoenberg and Anton Webern, as far as it was possible to realize them in German notation, at the beginning of his Chamber Concerto.
As for the similarity between Enigma and Pathetique, it's more melodic than harmonic and is hinted at even in the theme itself, now that I'm comparing the two in my mind. (I've played both, the Pathetique on piano and in the orchestra for Enigma.) It's more a family resemblance than a quote. For a closer resemblance check out the third movement of LvB's last string quartet (Opus 135) and the last movement of Gustav Mahler's Third Symphony, whose melodies are almost identical for the first few measures.
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