A question suggested by the deafness topic, but a little different: what would Beethoven's music have been like if, deaf or not, he had lived in a different era? I grant that (as I think it was Peter who said in the old thread on classical vs. romantic) Beethoven was formally and music-historically a classical composer. Yet I still think his wider emotional/musical temperament was significantly influenced by romanticism, in full flower in European literature by 1800-1805. Would his titanic musical personality have been able to squeeze itself into the relative strightjackets of the baroque or early classical styles? Or would he have exploded those in Beethoven-like ways also? Could this have happened without some romantic influence on him? Without such influence, and without the gathering impulses toward freedom and revolution in the early 19th C., would Beethoven himself been somewhat more sedate and conventionally respectable?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Time travel
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Chaszz:
Would his titanic musical personality have been able to squeeze itself into the relative strightjackets of the baroque or early classical styles?
"Finis coronat opus "
-
Originally posted by Chaszz:
Would his titanic musical personality have been able to squeeze itself into the relative strightjackets of the baroque or early classical styles? Or would he have exploded those in Beethoven-like ways also? Could this have happened without some romantic influence on him? Without such influence, and without the gathering impulses toward freedom and revolution in the early 19th C., would Beethoven himself been somewhat more sedate and conventionally respectable?
revolutionary or free.
Joy
'Truth and beauty joined'
Comment
-
Originally posted by Chaszz:
A question suggested by the deafness topic, but a little different: what would Beethoven's music have been like if, deaf or not, he had lived in a different era? I grant that (as I think it was Peter who said in the old thread on classical vs. romantic) Beethoven was formally and music-historically a classical composer. Yet I still think his wider emotional/musical temperament was significantly influenced by romanticism, in full flower in European literature by 1800-1805. Would his titanic musical personality have been able to squeeze itself into the relative strightjackets of the baroque or early classical styles? Or would he have exploded those in Beethoven-like ways also? Could this have happened without some romantic influence on him? Without such influence, and without the gathering impulses toward freedom and revolution in the early 19th C., would Beethoven himself been somewhat more sedate and conventionally respectable?
Gurn
Regards,
Gurn
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
That's my opinion, I may be wrong.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Comment
-
Originally posted by Rod:
All these 'if's!!!
See my paintings and sculptures at Saatchiart.com. In the search box, choose Artist and enter Charles Zigmund.
Comment
-
Originally posted by Chaszz:
Actually I should not have posed this question. It should be obvious to all of us by now that if Beethoven were born 75 years earlier, he would have BEEN Handel.
------------------
"If I were but of noble birth..." - Rod Corkin
Comment
-
May I suggest a twentieth-century parallel to LvB: Edgard Varese. He did not become deaf, and his compositions are many fewer than Beethoven's, but he also expanded the definition of music like our master. And, like Beethoven's late works, Varese's music took a long time to be fully understood and appreciated.
Also like Beethoven, Varese had an abusive father. It is amazing how many great men had absent or abusive fathers.
Comment
-
Originally posted by John Rasmussen:
May I suggest a twentieth-century parallel to LvB: Edgard Varese. He did not become deaf, and his compositions are many fewer than Beethoven's, but he also expanded the definition of music like our master. And, like Beethoven's late works, Varese's music took a long time to be fully understood and appreciated.
Also like Beethoven, Varese had an abusive father. It is amazing how many great men had absent or abusive fathers.
------------------
'Man know thyself''Man know thyself'
Comment
-
Originally posted by Rod:
All these 'if's!!!
My sincere apologies for that, GurnRegards,
Gurn
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
That's my opinion, I may be wrong.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Comment
-
Originally posted by John Rasmussen:
May I suggest a twentieth-century parallel to LvB: Edgard Varese. He did not become deaf, and his compositions are many fewer than Beethoven's, but he also expanded the definition of music like our master. And, like Beethoven's late works, Varese's music took a long time to be fully understood and appreciated.
Also like Beethoven, Varese had an abusive father. It is amazing how many great men had absent or abusive fathers.
I suppose the issue here is what level of impact has Varese's music had? While I've heard of some of his music I think Stravinsky and Shoenberg--sorry about that spelling-- (to name a couple) have had a much greater impact on the development of music in the 20th Century. Beethoven's influence was quite immediate and long lasting.
Comment
-
Originally posted by John Rasmussen:
May I suggest a twentieth-century parallel to LvB: Edgard Varese. He did not become deaf, and his compositions are many fewer than Beethoven's, but he also expanded the definition of music like our master. And, like Beethoven's late works, Varese's music took a long time to be fully understood and appreciated.
Also like Beethoven, Varese had an abusive father. It is amazing how many great men had absent or abusive fathers.
Joy'Truth and beauty joined'
Comment
-
Originally posted by Sorrano:
I suppose the issue here is what level of impact has Varese's music had? While I've heard of some of his music I think Stravinsky and Shoenberg--sorry about that spelling-- (to name a couple) have had a much greater impact on the development of music in the 20th Century. Beethoven's influence was quite immediate and long lasting.
------------------
'Man know thyself''Man know thyself'
Comment
-
Originally posted by Gurn Blanston:
I suggest that B had the tools to be great, but without the environment to bring them to the fore, he may well have withered on the vine. Cultural Darwinism if you will. That's my opinion, I may be wrong. ;-)
Gurn
painter."Finis coronat opus "
Comment
Comment