Originally posted by Petrushka
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Further have nearly all beethovenian utterances re the "meaning" of his work come down to us through the highly corrupt notes/biographies by Schindler, and are therefore highly unreliable.
I hardly believe these romanticised stories of what's behind the beethovenian notes.
There are too few connections between the surviving sketches and these backgrounds, though B annotated his sketches relatively extensively - his plans, the relations etc- and re-used his sketches sometimes years after being dotted down.
One of the very rare exceptions is the cavatina from opus 130, which caused Beethoven (in his own, and this time well documented words) to get tears in his eyes.
Citing the Eroica as an example, Richard Strauss was explicit in his autobiographical claims in writing Ein Heldenleben. Similar to Shostakovich in the 15th Symphony, Strauss goes so far as to quote his own works in the 'Heroes Works of Peace' and more explicit than that you cannot get!
Gustav Mahler was also explicit in claiming that his symphonies were about his whole life and the suffering he had endured.
So could we listen to the above mentioned works knowing nothing whatsoever of the autobiography behind the music? Of course we can but in my view the real appreciation will only come with the knowledge of what lies behind the notes.
I certainly appreciated Ein Heldenleben much more when I was fully aware of what every one of Strauss's quotes was.
As for the Shostakovich 7, I believe that it lies firmly in the tradition of Beethoven's example. Again, we don't need to know what circumstances lay behind it's composition or to have read books on Stalin's Russia or the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union, but if you do all of this then the appreciation of why the notes were written in the way they were is very considerably deepened.
There are other works (Berg's Lyric Suite is one, Elgar's Violin Concerto another) that have autobiographical content and I daresay there are many that do but of which we know nothing.
And though I made some critical notes in the margin, it does make sense what you wrote, Petrushka
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