Beethoven - an antidote to Composer of the Week

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  • Joseph K
    Banned
    • Oct 2017
    • 7765

    #16
    Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
    Which wasn't what I was doing. What I was trying (in my usual clumsy way!) to do was point out the ways, whys and wherefores in which Beethoven has been and is singled out of the pantheon for use as he is here.
    Ok.

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    • Edgy 2
      Guest
      • Jan 2019
      • 2035

      #17
      I’ve learned a lot about the string quartets from these talks











      “Music is the best means we have of digesting time." — Igor Stravinsky

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      • Bryn
        Banned
        • Mar 2007
        • 24688

        #18
        Then there's the Schiff lecture series on the Piano Sonatas.

        Comment

        • Edgy 2
          Guest
          • Jan 2019
          • 2035

          #19
          Originally posted by Bryn View Post
          “Music is the best means we have of digesting time." — Igor Stravinsky

          Comment

          • richardfinegold
            Full Member
            • Sep 2012
            • 7642

            #20
            Originally posted by Bryn View Post
            I haven’t seen the Schiff, but I firmly recommend the Bis Coursera Course on the Sonatas, along with JB’s actual recordings

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            • richardfinegold
              Full Member
              • Sep 2012
              • 7642

              #21
              Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
              There is either an awful lot one can say about Beethoven to the world of today, or not very much at all, in my opinion. Beethoven could compose the sorts of music he wanted to because it expressed the congruence of his interests with those of the rising bourgeoisie who wanted a music that would express their power and dominance. It is specific - preaching to the age in which it was composed. For the sake of life itself it's time the ruling classes were put out of their misery, but they cling on much in the analogous way "we" cling on to the manifestations of their power and any past glory that went with it - the accompanying miseries put down to human frailties we are expected to look up to the Beethovens and past heroes as iconic substitutes in a hypermediated world in order to overcome. The progressive age Beethoven was in effect celebrating was expressed in the survivalistic spirit of his music - an individualistic ethos of winners and losers, of heroes and people in need of rescue in one way or another, now etched into damaged ecosystems and dreams sustained by the power and fakery of publicity.

              We no longer need the old dreams, nor do we need new Beethovens, as seems somehow implied by his being championed. If we don't need new Beethovens, why is there any need to pore over the same old same old like prize exhibits in a museum collection that has long revealed any secrets that may have any relevance to the present, like, how have they managed to survive? Who keeps digging them up for display and for what purposes? Why all this time and "taxpayers' money" spent, in effect, on propaganda of the second order?

              These are questions we really should be asking.
              I think that this completely misses the value of Beethoven’s Music. Every Composer existed at a certain point in History and had some specific circumstances surrounding compositions. Beethoven’s Music has retained its appeal because of the Universality of it’s message. Any one who has dreams, experienced great sadness, joy, disappointment, whatever can be moved.

              Comment

              • greenilex
                Full Member
                • Nov 2010
                • 1626

                #22
                As a woman, I find LvB’s music immensely attractive.

                But SA has a point. Heroes have a tendency to lose their togas.

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                • Richard Barrett
                  Guest
                  • Jan 2016
                  • 6259

                  #23
                  Originally posted by richardfinegold View Post
                  Beethoven’s Music has retained its appeal because of the Universality of it’s message.
                  We need to be careful about making claims for the "universality" of this or that when what we mean is white Anglo/Europeans of a certain social class. It might be imagined that music like Beethoven could well have a wider appeal than that, but I'm reminded of Colin McPhee playing classical music of various periods and styles to Balinese musicians and getting the reaction that it all sounded more or less the same.

                  Comment

                  • oddoneout
                    Full Member
                    • Nov 2015
                    • 9136

                    #24
                    Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
                    I can see why someone who had listened to Monday's gushing CotW would think in this way, S_A - that's precisely why we need an "antidote" to it. I'm seeking out and posting online material which demonstrate that this so-familiar Music hasn't "revealed any secrets it may have any relevance to the present". Monday's CotW certainly spent a lot of time (and some of the licence-Payers' money) on "propaganda of the second order" (actually, Ms Alsop's dog doesn't even reach the "third order") - and seemed intended to keep matters of technique and craft - easily communicated to the wider audiences - restricted to an "elite" (to use Beeb vocabulary) who have studied this Music.
                    If there are 125 episodes and a variety of 'guests' one would hope that there might be some which are of value. It is perhaps a bit early to judge? In some respects I suppose I am lucky in not really being that well informed in anything other than the basic facts about LvB's music, preferring to listen and feel directly as it were, so am less likely to be irritated by the approach being taken or the whole concept of concentrating on him in this way. I would hope that I may learn something or be made to think, and also that the wider R3 audience may get something of value from the enterprise.

                    Comment

                    • richardfinegold
                      Full Member
                      • Sep 2012
                      • 7642

                      #25
                      Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post
                      We need to be careful about making claims for the "universality" of this or that when what we mean is white Anglo/Europeans of a certain social class. It might be imagined that music like Beethoven could well have a wider appeal than that, but I'm reminded of Colin McPhee playing classical music of various periods and styles to Balinese musicians and getting the reaction that it all sounded more or less the same.
                      I have two Black Friends that I have attended Concerts with over the years who adore Beethoven (one of whom keeps managing to “borrow” CDs that never seem to be returned). I have several Hispanic friends that do the same. The average audience at a Symphony Concert is perhaps 40 percent Asian many of whom are conversing in their native tongues.. None of these individuals qualify as “white/Anglo”. However, I will concede that I have not knowingly tested the popularity of Beethoven amongst Inuit,Papuan New Guinea, or Australian Aboriginal Population, and I also cannot judge his popularity in Galaxies Far Away.
                      Short of that, I submit that the music of a Composer that has been dead for almost two hundred years , and is still performed and appreciated as it is, is as close to being Universal as any Music will ever be considered to be

                      Comment

                      • gurnemanz
                        Full Member
                        • Nov 2010
                        • 7380

                        #26
                        Originally posted by oddoneout View Post
                        If there are 125 episodes and a variety of 'guests' one would hope that there might be some which are of value. It is perhaps a bit early to judge? In some respects I suppose I am lucky in not really being that well informed in anything other than the basic facts about LvB's music, preferring to listen and feel directly as it were, so am less likely to be irritated by the approach being taken or the whole concept of concentrating on him in this way. I would hope that I may learn something or be made to think, and also that the wider R3 audience may get something of value from the enterprise.
                        Like you, I'm looking forward to this year and will try to remain positive. In 1969/70 I spent a year in Germany as my year abroad from my German degree and experienced the full force of Beethoven's 200th anniversary celebrations in the country of his birth. As a student, I had a poster of Beethoven in Byronic stance on my wall on which I had written: “Vom Herzen, möge es wieder, zu Herzen gehen!” as B had said of his Missa Solemnis. I used to listen to it when I was depressed. 50 years on and retired, I recently took the time to work through Jan Swafford's tome, "Beethoven: Anguish and Triumph" fairly meticulously, (recommended on this Board), breaking off to listen to works as I went along.

                        I find this thread is a bit off-putting and negative and I have felt more like contributing an antidote to the thread rather than to the BBC programme. There are obviously countless other analyses of Beethoven's life and music available. Schama and Alsop are not "bloody idiots" and I am happy to hear what they have to say. The informal style isn't completely my cup of tea and I have not (yet) gained that many new insights but I have no sense of needing an "antidote", as if someone were trying to poison me.

                        Comment

                        • Serial_Apologist
                          Full Member
                          • Dec 2010
                          • 37563

                          #27
                          Originally posted by gurnemanz View Post
                          Like you, I'm looking forward to this year and will try to remain positive. In 1969/70 I spent a year in Germany as my year abroad from my German degree and experienced the full force of Beethoven's 200th anniversary celebrations in the country of his birth. As a student, I had a poster of Beethoven in Byronic stance on my wall on which I had written: “Vom Herzen, möge es wieder, zu Herzen gehen!” as B had said of his Missa Solemnis. I used to listen to it when I was depressed. 50 years on and retired, I recently took the time to work through Jan Swafford's tome, "Beethoven: Anguish and Triumph" fairly meticulously, (recommended on this Board), breaking off to listen to works as I went along.

                          I find this thread is a bit off-putting and negative and I have felt more like contributing an antidote to the thread rather than to the BBC programme. There are obviously countless other analyses of Beethoven's life and music available. Schama and Alsop are not "bloody idiots" and I am happy to hear what they have to say. The informal style isn't completely my cup of tea and I have not (yet) gained that many new insights but I have no sense of needing an "antidote", as if someone were trying to poison me.
                          But can't people at least consider, that devoting a WHOLE YEAR to Beethoven, at the expense of others - and as if at this very time when it is all coming unstitched, he might well appear to being portrayed as western music's redemption on behalf of the whole world - is a bit much?

                          Comment

                          • Sir Velo
                            Full Member
                            • Oct 2012
                            • 3225

                            #28
                            Originally posted by richardfinegold View Post
                            I have two Black Friends that I have attended Concerts with over the years who adore Beethoven (one of whom keeps managing to “borrow” CDs that never seem to be returned). I have several Hispanic friends that do the same. The average audience at a Symphony Concert is perhaps 40 percent Asian many of whom are conversing in their native tongues.. None of these individuals qualify as “white/Anglo”. However, I will concede that I have not knowingly tested the popularity of Beethoven amongst Inuit,Papuan New Guinea, or Australian Aboriginal Population, and I also cannot judge his popularity in Galaxies Far Away.
                            Short of that, I submit that the music of a Composer that has been dead for almost two hundred years , and is still performed and appreciated as it is, is as close to being Universal as any Music will ever be considered to be
                            Of course, the naysayers will say your experience is purely anecdotal RFG.

                            To my mind the person who is tired of Beethoven may well be said to be tired of life. No doubt that's a university educated white male, middle class, middle aged POV but

                            Comment

                            • vinteuil
                              Full Member
                              • Nov 2010
                              • 12768

                              #29
                              Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
                              But can't people at least consider, that devoting a WHOLE YEAR to Beethoven, at the expense of others - and as if at this very time when it is all coming unstitched, he might well appear to being portrayed as western music's redemption on behalf of the whole world - is a bit much?
                              ... what had you in mind when you say "all is coming unstitched"? - Something along these lines? -

                              Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
                              I even saw a commentator yesterday include volcanic eruptions and earthquakes among the consequences of humankind's mismanagement of earth's life systems!


                              [ ... for what it's worth, much as I love Beethoven, I see him very much as part of a particular European moment, the product of the cusp of the Enlightenment and Romanticism, inevitably the child of the turmoil of the French Revolution 'and all that that entails' - whereas the provincial lutheran Bach seems paradoxically, ahistorically, 'universal'.]

                              .

                              Comment

                              • Sir Velo
                                Full Member
                                • Oct 2012
                                • 3225

                                #30
                                Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
                                There is either an awful lot one can say about Beethoven to the world of today, or not very much at all, in my opinion. Beethoven could compose the sorts of music he wanted to because it expressed the congruence of his interests with those of the rising bourgeoisie who wanted a music that would express their power and dominance. It is specific - preaching to the age in which it was composed. For the sake of life itself it's time the ruling classes were put out of their misery, but they cling on much in the analogous way "we" cling on to the manifestations of their power and any past glory that went with it - the accompanying miseries put down to human frailties we are expected to look up to the Beethovens and past heroes as iconic substitutes in a hypermediated world in order to overcome. The progressive age Beethoven was in effect celebrating was expressed in the survivalistic spirit of his music - an individualistic ethos of winners and losers, of heroes and people in need of rescue in one way or another, now etched into damaged ecosystems and dreams sustained by the power and fakery of publicity.

                                We no longer need the old dreams, nor do we need new Beethovens, as seems somehow implied by his being championed. If we don't need new Beethovens, why is there any need to pore over the same old same old like prize exhibits in a museum collection that has long revealed any secrets that may have any relevance to the present, like, how have they managed to survive? Who keeps digging them up for display and for what purposes? Why all this time and "taxpayers' money" spent, in effect, on propaganda of the second order?
                                Beethoven's "message" - the music, would seem to have as much relevance to our age now as ever.
                                Last edited by Sir Velo; 16-01-20, 14:44.

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