Originally posted by LMcD
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Ludwig van Beethoven (1770 - 1827)
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The Sketchbooks
Beethoven Unleashed: Private Papers
Week 13 of 26 w/c/29.6.20
Donald Macleod explores Beethoven’s musical notebooks to see what they can tell us about his composing process.
This week Donald Macleod is joined by Beethoven scholar Erica Buurman and biographer Jan Swafford to investigate some the many documents and papers that Beethoven left behind after his death, which are now scattered in archives and collections across the world. Donald and his guests explore high-quality, digital facsimiles of Beethoven’s most personal records including his letters, notebooks and journals; scouring them for clues to his relationships, his work and his everyday life.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostAnybody read Swafford's biography of LvB? Comments?
I remember finding the index adequate but to be not the most helpful. I found myself printing off from the internet a list of opus numbers and years to keep myself orientated.
On a personal note: It would obviously have made the appendix too bulky to include the original text for the many quotes included but I do know German and I often wanted to read the original German as well as the translation - especially in the case of some of Beethoven's own more colourful utterances. Luckily, I do have a couple of books with original documents, but I couldn't always locate the relevant bit.
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Originally posted by LMcD View Post'Being Beethoven', a 3-part series which begins at 9.00 p.m. on BBC4 tonight, looks promising, with a strong line-up of featured artists. I shall definitely give it a go - if nothing else, it will be quicker than listening to 26 episodes of Composer Of The Week!
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Frustrated Ambitions
Beethoven Unleashed: Restless Spirit
Week 14 of 26 (Week commencing 13.7.20) Available to 11 August
Beethoven is seeking financial stability in Vienna and making further attempts to find love. However, nothing goes quite to plan.
This week, Donald Macleod explores Ludwig van Beethoven’s life through the years 1807-1809. This was a period that ended with the traumatic second occupation of Vienna by Napoleon’s forces, and a time when Beethoven himself was feeling increasingly restless in the city after his plans to gain financial stability were thwarted.Last edited by kernelbogey; 17-07-20, 06:19.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostI read it a couple of years ago, taking my time and being fairly meticulous. I broke off quite often to listen to works as they came up, including quite a few which I had hitherto not paid much attention to. It was thorough and readable. For me there were many discoveries and insights....
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For what it's worth my overall favourite Beethoven biog remains Maynard Solomon's . I've dipped in and out of the updated Thayer over the years - it's a really heavy tome but remains the definitive biog - or so the scholars say. I haven't yet finished Swafford but it's well - written and has some original insights - tricky in this over-ploughed field. I've started but not finished Beethoven Hero which is densely written in academic English and needs musical knowledge as well as , for Chap 1 , the score of the Eroica. It's not a biog either .Starting and not finishing seems to be a theme here - but I'm not really a fan of biographies . I also really like the Thames and Hudson H.C Robbins Lansdon Beethoven slim volume- because it's short and has lots of pics! To my surprise I enjoyed Suchet 'Last Master' series - he's a good writer . He knows his stuff and draws a lot on the published sources but there are incidents in there that I haven't read about anywhere else which make me worry about embellishment.
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The Inner Circle
Beethoven Unleashed: In His Own Words
Week commencing 27 July (Week 15 of 26) Available to 18 August
More than 1,770 of Beethoven's letters still survive and, this week, Donald Macleod delves into five different areas of this extensive correspondence. Today, Beethoven writes to three of his close friends. Those who knew him were ready to acknowledge his genius, but they also knew he was quick to fly off the handle so a degree of understanding would be needed. Beethoven met Franz Wegeler when he was 12 years old and still living in Bonn. Wegeler became a highly respected physician, and we find Beethoven asking his advice over his many health problems. One of the last letters he wrote is an affectionate letter to Wegeler, a month or so before he died in March 1827. It is most likely that Wegeler introduced Beethoven to the von Breuning family. Beethoven became very friendly with the whole family, and after one of the sons, Stephan, took up a position in Vienna, their friendship developed even further, although not without the occasional upset along the way. A talented musician and a theologian, Carl Amenda, was someone with whom Beethoven felt able to reveal his most personal thoughts and anxieties. The letters are read by Adrian Lester.
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Originally posted by kernelbogey View PostThe Inner Circle
Beethoven Unleashed: In His Own Words
Week commencing 27 July (Week 15 of 26) Available to 18 August
More than 1,770 of Beethoven's letters still survive and, this week, Donald Macleod delves into five different areas of this extensive correspondence. Today, Beethoven writes to three of his close friends. Those who knew him were ready to acknowledge his genius, but they also knew he was quick to fly off the handle so a degree of understanding would be needed. Beethoven met Franz Wegeler when he was 12 years old and still living in Bonn. Wegeler became a highly respected physician, and we find Beethoven asking his advice over his many health problems. One of the last letters he wrote is an affectionate letter to Wegeler, a month or so before he died in March 1827. It is most likely that Wegeler introduced Beethoven to the von Breuning family. Beethoven became very friendly with the whole family, and after one of the sons, Stephan, took up a position in Vienna, their friendship developed even further, although not without the occasional upset along the way. A talented musician and a theologian, Carl Amenda, was someone with whom Beethoven felt able to reveal his most personal thoughts and anxieties. The letters are read by Adrian Lester.
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The Aftermath of War
Beethoven Unleashed: Creating the Myth
Week 16 of 26 w/c 10.8.20 (Available to 10 September)
Note later time 1300
Donald Macleod explores how the after effects of Napoleon’s invasion of Vienna including crippling economic sanctions and devaluation of the currency, impacted Beethoven’s life and work.
This week, Donald Macleod explores Ludwig van Beethoven’s life through the years of 1810-1812. This was a period of great financial hardship for all of Vienna in the aftermath of Napoleon’s second occupation of the city. Beethoven struggled through this economic depression, composing his Seventh and Eighth Symphonies with little hope of getting performances. The financial crisis wasn’t the only thing to afflict the composer either; alongside an increase in physical ailments, Beethoven also suffered a great emotional crisis which culminated in the letter he wrote to his unnamed ‘Immortal Beloved’.
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