Last night I was flipping through the TV cabel channels when I came across one of the stations from Germany. There was a performance of Beethoven's Three Sonatas for Violin and Piano, Op. 12. Anne Sophie Mutter was the violinist and Lambert Orkis the pianist. It was a BBC production from Paris and I think it was from 1999. I quite enjoyed this performance and it's the first time I have heard these sonatas. I especially liked the 3rd sonata in E-flat major. A pleasant surprise indeed.
All I knew about these sonatas was that Beethoven dedicated them to Salieri in 1799. I also found part of a review from the Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung that found these Beethoven sonatas "a forced attempt at strange modulations, an aversion to the conventional key relationships, a piling up of difficulty upon difficulity." Sounds like they didn't want to accept the fact that Beethoven's music was changing music into another direction, away from that of Mozart and Haydn.
Then just when I thought that it couldn't get any better, this performance was followed by a showing of a 1970 broadcast from Berlin (old DDR) of Beethoven's Symphony #3, the Eroica, my favorite B. symphony! This program was one from a series made for Beethoven's 200th birthday back in Berlin. This program started out with a 15 minute discussion between the conductor Kurt Masur and two other men (I forget their names). They talked about this symphony, Beethoven and the goings on in Vienna at this time (1804) and of course Napoleon. This was then followed by the performance of the Eroica by the Staatskapelle Berlin conducted by Kurt Masur. I was in Heaven...
All I knew about these sonatas was that Beethoven dedicated them to Salieri in 1799. I also found part of a review from the Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung that found these Beethoven sonatas "a forced attempt at strange modulations, an aversion to the conventional key relationships, a piling up of difficulty upon difficulity." Sounds like they didn't want to accept the fact that Beethoven's music was changing music into another direction, away from that of Mozart and Haydn.
Then just when I thought that it couldn't get any better, this performance was followed by a showing of a 1970 broadcast from Berlin (old DDR) of Beethoven's Symphony #3, the Eroica, my favorite B. symphony! This program was one from a series made for Beethoven's 200th birthday back in Berlin. This program started out with a 15 minute discussion between the conductor Kurt Masur and two other men (I forget their names). They talked about this symphony, Beethoven and the goings on in Vienna at this time (1804) and of course Napoleon. This was then followed by the performance of the Eroica by the Staatskapelle Berlin conducted by Kurt Masur. I was in Heaven...
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