Tag: Ludwig van Beethoven

  • Beethoven’s Birthday A Christmas Gift Idea

    Beethoven’s Birthday A Christmas Gift Idea

    Only nine days until Christmas. Are you feeling the heat yet?

    Just remember, the Christmas season isn’t all about the gifts. It’s also about the birth of…

    BEETHOVEN!

    That’s right, Beethoven’s birthday is widely celebrated on today’s date. There’s no actual record of when he was born, but we know he was baptized on December 17, 1770. So it’s likely today is the anniversary of his nativity.

    As you sweat it out on line at the post office or checkout counter, consider amusing yourself by contemplating what you might get classical music’s most iconic composer.

    Here’s a literal wish list scrawled by Beethoven. Among the desired items: soap, a mousetrap, a knife, and a metronome. In 2011, the list sold at auction for over $73,000.

    Happy birthday, Ludwig Van, with angry sugar plums dancing in your head!


    More about the contents – and the context – of Beethoven’s list:

    https://inlibris.com/item/bn51798/

  • Celebrating Beethoven’s 250th Birthday

    Celebrating Beethoven’s 250th Birthday

    Happy birthday, Beethoven!

    Well, here we are. Your 250th birthday – what would have been the biggest celebration in classical music (at least until 2027, the 200th anniversary of your death) – and we’re all sitting at home with our records. That’s okay. I’ve got plenty of good ones. Anyone care to share any of their favorites?

    Here’s a montage of 42 conductors and 1 pianist, performing the most famous opening in all of Western music. It really gives a sense of what different interpreters can bring to a piece of music (also, in Barenboim’s case, the effect of an unstifled sneeze). Performance matters!

    Here’s one from 2007 that I find quite compelling, led by the Hungarian composer Péter Eötvös.

    My candidate for craziest stick technique:

    Perhaps more instructive is this traversal by line-riding bikes:

    Clearly, this symphony is bulletproof.


    Beethoven as he appeared in 1804-05, while he was at work on his “Fifth”

  • Two Ludwigs at Marlboro

    Two Ludwigs at Marlboro

    It’s a tale of two Ludwigs, on this week’s “Music from Marlboro.”

    For a time, Ludwig Spohr (1784-1859) – recognized everywhere, outside of his native Germany, as Louis (pronounced “Louie,” as in the French) – was as highly regarded as Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827).

    A triple threat – a violinist, a conductor, and a composer – he churned out music in all genres. He wrote 9 symphonies, 10 operas, 15 violin concertos, 4 clarinet concertos, and 36 string quartets. Add to those, innumerable chamber works for all sorts of instrumental combinations, with a special emphasis on the harp – since the harp was the instrument of his wife, with whom he often appeared in concert.

    Following his death, in 1859, Spohr’s reputation plummeted. It wasn’t until the late 20th century that his music underwent a significant revival.

    Today, we’ll have chance to enjoy his Sextet for Strings in C major, Op. 140, a comparatively late work, but one imbued with a remarkably youthful spirit. A supporter of German unification, republicanism, and democratic causes, Spohr was inspired by the revolutions that swept across Europe in 1848.

    From the 1980 Marlboro Music Festival, we’ll hear it performed by violinists Pina Carmirelli and Veronica Knittel, violists Philipp Naegele and Karen Dreyfus, and cellists Peter Wiley and Georg Faust.

    A friend of Beethoven, Spohr participated in a memorable run-through of his colleague’s “Ghost” Trio, with the composer banging away at an out-of-tune piano. He also played in the premiere of Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony.

    By way of contrast, but also honoring their association, we’ll open the hour with Beethoven’s Octet for Winds in E-flat major, Op. 103, from 1792. Despite the high opus number, the work was actually written in the composer’s hometown of Bonn, prior to his move to Vienna.

    We’ll hear it in a 1957 recording featuring Marlboro cofounder Marcel Moyse, as director of an ensemble made up of oboists Alfred Genovese and Earl Schuster, clarinetists Harold Wright and Richard Lesser, bassoonists Anthony Checchia and Roland Small, and hornists Myron Bloom and Richard Mackey.

    Get ready to flip your wig for two Ludwigs, on this week’s “Music from Marlboro,” this Wednesday evening at 6:00 EST, on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org.

    Marlboro School of Music and Festival: Official Page


    When the cravat was king: Beethoven (left) and Louis Spohr

  • Happy Birthday Beethoven Celebrate on WWFM

    Happy Birthday Beethoven Celebrate on WWFM

    HAPPY BIRTHDAY. BEETHOVEN!

    On this date in 1770, Ludwig van Beethoven was born. More than any other composer, Beethoven reimagined and reinvented music of the late 18th century. He bent and even broke rules thought to have been unbreakable. By the time he reached the late string quartets – works that still have the power to surprise – his contemporaries struggled to wrap their heads around what Louis Spohr described as “indecipherable, uncorrected horrors.”

    This was music for himself, and music for the future. It’s because Beethoven was so true to his inner voice that his music remains so vital. It’s also a pretty good reflection of the man – open-hearted, full of profound feeling, startlingly explosive, and always striving to achieve the highest pinnacle.

    I hope you’ll join us today on The Classical Network, as we trace the unprecedented artistic journey of the boy from Bonn, who raised himself up, through the power of imagination and sheer will, to become King of Composers. What’s more, Beethoven had the foresight and the generosity to take the rest of us with him.

    We’ll be presenting the Master’s complete symphonies in exceptional recordings, lovingly curated by WWFM hosts. The celebration will begin at 9:00 EST with Alice Weiss and David Osenberg, who will introduce the Symphonies Nos. 1, 2, 3 & 4.

    After a break for “Bach at 1,” Michael Wisnosky will present the Symphonies Nos. 5 & 6.

    Then I’ll be along at 4:00 to storm the gates of Heaven with the Symphonies Nos. 7, 8 & 9.

    As if all that weren’t enough, as an added bonus, David Dubal and Jed Distler will lend their expertise and reflections to two hours of Beethoven’s piano music, beginning tonight at 8.

    Traditionally, Beethoven’s birthday has been a big fundraiser for the station. This year, our Beethoven birthday bash will come your way with limited interruptions. No breaking in between movements or playing highlights from the major works. We’re going to give you everything as the composer intended – pure, unadulterated Beethoven.

    Of course, we do hope that you will be moved to support it. We will remind you of our telephone number, 1-888-232-1212, in between symphonies, hoping to take your calls. Also, you can support us anytime by visiting our website and making a donation at wwfm.org. Help yourself to one of our attractive thank you gifts as a token of our sincere gratitude.

    It would be a sin not to support these symphonies. Help preserve the legacy of great music on WWFM – The Classical Network and wwfm.org. Thank you for your steadfast support!

  • Beethoven A King Among Composers?

    Beethoven A King Among Composers?

    Was Beethoven the King of Composers?

    If anything, Beethoven proved just how far someone could go with determination, a gift for fantasy, and plain old hard work. Beethoven may have lacked the natural facility of a Bach or a Mozart, yet through an uncompromising force of will he managed to achieve greatness. In fact, so powerful was his musical imagination that he managed to change music. And he knew his own worth, even to the point of not deferring to his “betters.”

    How much is Beethoven worth to you? As The Classical Network observes the Master’s birthday today (he was born on December 16, 1770) with a full day of his music, join us in celebrating the great Ludwig Van with your gift of support at 1-888-232-1212 or wwfm.org.

    Because of listeners just like you, we have been able to share 35 years of some of the greatest music ever written. All of us at WWFM – The Classical Network thank you for your generosity.

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