Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Meyers 1 Amanda Meyers MUSC-101-042-F13 Craig Ferrin 18 September 2013 Biography of Ludwig Van Beethoven Ludwig Van Beethoven was baptized December 17, 1770 in Bonn, Germany. His birth date is not officially known, however, it was as according to the law and family customs that babies were to be baptized within 24 hours of birth. Thus making December 16, 1770, his real birth date. His family originated from Brabant in Belgium. He was the oldest of seven siblings, only three boys out of seven siblings survived. He is best known for being a deaf composer and a predominant musical figure in the transitional period between the classical and romantic era. He was more than just a composer; he was an innovator broadening the horizons of quartet, sonata, symphony, and concerto plus combining vocals and instruments in a new and different way. His father was a musician and an alcoholic, his mother was said to be gentle and warm-hearted; Beethoven has been quoted with saying that she is his “best friend”. At an early age Beethoven was interested in music and his father taught him everything that he could from sun up to sun down, everyday. His father envisioned creating Beethoven into a new Mozart, a child prodigy. When his father taught him all that he could, renowned musician Gottlab Neefe decided to teach Beethoven further. Neefe taught Beethoven advanced music and introduced him to philosophers. In 1782 Beethoven published his first work, at the age of 12, “A Variation in C Minor for Piano” Throughout the years Beethoven practiced music and even taught music to others. In 1801 Beethoven noticed that he was becoming deaf. He was so angry upon discovering this. He was hateful toward the world and thought it unfair that a musician with such talent as him could possibly be going deaf. He pondered suicide and even wrote about it. Fortunately he chose not to commit suicide and continued working on music. He felt that he had more to discover and learn about music and pursued his dream. He moved to Vienna after his mother passed away. He did not wish to live in his hometown anymore after the passing of his mother. In Vienna, a group of wealthy admirers, mainly princes, paid Beethoven $4,000 florins annually as long as he stayed living in Vienna. This grant made him the world’s first independent composer. Most composers at this time, like Mozart, were servants in the houses of wealthy aristocrat families. They were treated like any other servant staff except they had the added responsibility of composing and performing music. Beethoven, however, was free to write what he wanted, when he wanted, under nobody’s command, just as he pleased. Johann Nepomuk Maelzel was a genius inventor and quite possibly the inventor of the metronome. Johann created various devices for Beethoven to help with his hearing, such as: acoustic cornets, a listening system that links up to the piano and many others. In 1813 Beethoven composed, “The Victory of Wellington”, this work was written for a mechanical instrument made by Maelzel called the “pan harmonica”. Above all the musical instrument aids Maezel invented, it was the metronome that helped evolve Beethoven’s music. The academy of 1814 helped to regroup Beethoven’s work. With this in mind, Beethoven had three compositional periods in his lifetime. The first period was from about 1794-1802 and was primarily shaped from Mozart and Meyers 2 Hayden. This period consisted of Piano works (piano sonatas), Chamber works, Orchestral works (piano concertos), and Transitional works; which lead to Beethoven’s second period. During this time he was writing under progressive loss of hearing. Also “Moonlight Sonata” was written during this time. Beethoven’s second period was between 1803-1815 where most of his popular works came from. These included, Piano sonatas (“Moonlight Sonata”), Songs, only one Opera “Fidelio”, Chamber works, Orchestral works (4th, 5th, and 6th Symphonies), and the Transitional works; The Transitional works were a time when he was breaking the mold from Mozart and Hayden and developing his own style. The Third Period was from 1815 until his death. His deafness became more serious. This period consisted of Piano works, Choral works, Chamber works, and Orchestral works. Ludwig Van Beethoven passed away March 26, 1827, in Vienna, Austria, after catching a cold in 1826. The illness complicated other health problems that he had suffered with all his life. The autopsy is said to have shown that the most dominant cause of death was post-hepatatic cirrhosis of the liver. It also showed some idea as to why he became deaf; it is supposedly because he contracted typhus. It is estimated that between 10,000 and 30,000 people attended his funeral. All very close friends and/or admirers. Beethoven composed his most important works during the last ten years of his life, at a time when he was completely deaf; Consisting of an opera, six symphonies, four solo concerti, five string quartets, six string sonatas, seven piano sonatas, five sets of piano variations, four overtures, four trios, two sextets, and 72 songs. He truly was a remarkable composer and musical prodigy. Composition History “Moonlight Sonata”, Opus 27,And No.2- Adagio Sostenuto-7:10 This song was composed in the summer of 1801, in Hungary. It was first composed at an estate that belonged to the Brunswick family. The Moonlight Sonata was then published in 1802. Dedicated to one of Beethoven’s students that he felt passionately for. Her name was Countess Giulietta Gucciardi and she was only 17 years old. It is said that the atmosphere of this song is composed in such a way that it correlates with what the composer felt as he watched at the side of a friend, who left this world prematurely. “A sonata is a solo piece for piano or for another solo instrument with piano accompaniment.” (WebCOM) ‘Fur Elise”-2:56 German for For Elise, this song was composed in 1810; But not yet published until 1865, which was well after Beethoven’s death in 1827. There is much speculation as to who this “Elise” is. No one really knows who it is or his or her significance to Beethoven. He was well into his career and completely deaf when he composed this song. Some ideas as to whom this song is dedicated to and named after are secret admirers, lovers, friends, or simply a gesture of endearment. Meyers 3 “Symphony No5.”- in C Minor op.67-1st movement Little is known about this composition. Beethoven revised and rewrote this symphony for years. It was composed in 1804-1808. He premiered it at Vienna’s Theater an der wein, on December 22,1808. Symphony No.5 is one of his most well known symphonies composed. i. ii. iii. iv. v. vi. vii. viii. Listening Guide “Moonlight Sonata” This sonata is made up of three traditional movements: 1. Adagio sostenuto (slow and sustained) 2. Allegretto (a little quick) 3. Presto agitato (very fast and agitated) 0:00- Introduction: This composition is from the Classical era. The form is adagio sostenuto. The melody in the introduction is very conjunct with an arch contour. The dynamics are soft as the harmony is minor and consonance. The rhythm is in duple meter with an imitation texture. Timbre- The volume is piano (soft) and crescendo. The pitch is in A. 0:30- The form is adagio sostenuto. The texture has changed to counterpoint, layering two different melodies against each other, with the pitch dropping to B and volume remaining soft. Rhythm is duple meter and dynamics remain at piano. The melody is still arch counter and conjunct. The harmony is also still in minor and consonance. 1:00-The form is adagio sostenuto. The texture remains counterpoint with the melody at arch counter, fluctuating from ascending to descending and ascending to descending while the piano layers itself over the melody at duple meter it goes from soft in dynamic to medium in volume and pitch in B. The harmony is minor and consonance. 1:30- The form is allegretto. Texture remains at counterpoint. The pitch switches back to A while the volume is at medium. Dynamics start to crescendo. The melody is descending contour and harmony is dissonance and minor. Rhythm is duple meter in adagio. 2:00-The form is allegretto. The texture is counterpoint and rhythm remains in duple meter. Melody is descending contour. Harmony stays at consonance and minor changing from major on a few notes and back to minor. Dynamics are soft but volume is mezzo (medium). The pitch is in B. 2:30- The form is allegretto. Texture at counterpoint, with rhythm in duple meter. Melody changes a little to disjunct and arch counter. Harmony is dissonance. Dynamics are minor. Volume is mezzo and pitch works from A to B. 3:00- The form is allegretto. Texture counterpoint with duple meter. Melody is descending contour then ascends. Harmony is dissonance, minor that builds to major. Dynamics are med-soft. Volume is mezzo and pitch is A. 3:30- The form is allegretto. Texture is counterpoint. Duple meter, with a conjunct melody that ascends to the highest point and falls back down to the lowest point, arch contour. Harmony is dissonance that goes from major to minor. Dynamics are loud with the volume in mezzo-forte, pitch goes from A to B. Meyers ix. x. xi. xii. xiii. xiv. 4 4:00-The form is adagio sostenuto. Texture is counterpoint and rhythm is duple meter. Melody is conjunct and arch counter. Harmony turns into a resolution from dissonance back to consonance. Dynamics are soft, volume at piano, and pitch is in B. 4:30- The form is allegretto. Texture is counterpoint and duple meter rhythm. Melody is arch counter and conjunct. Harmony is consonance in minor. The dynamics are soft and volume is med-soft. Pitch goes from B to A. 5:00- The form is allegretto. Texture is counterpoint and rhythm is duple meter. Harmony is minor and consonance. Dynamics are soft. Volume is piano and pitch goes from A to B. 5:30- The form is presto adagio. Texture is counterpoint and rhythm is duple meter. The melody is a little disjunct and arch counter, going crescendo and then back down to diminuendo. The harmony is in minor and dissonance. Dynamics are loud and volume is mezzo with the pitch in B. 6:00- The form is presto adagio. Texture is counterpoint and rhythm is duple meter. Melody is arch counter and disjunct. Harmony is minor and dissonance. Dynamics are loud working down to soft. Volume is mezzo-piano and pitch is in B. 6:30- The form is presto adagio. Texture is counterpoint and rhythm is duple meter. Melody is arch counter and goes back to being conjunct. The harmony finds resolution again from dissonance to consonance, still in minor. The dynamics move from loud to soft. Volume goes from mezzo-piano to piano and finally to pianissimo. The pitch ends in B as we reach the cadence. “Fur Elise” The form of this composition is, Rondo, which means that it is a form with successive return to the main theme. Varying themes are introduced but the main theme always separates them. i. 0:00-Introduction-This composition starts out with the texture being imitation in triple meter as the rhythm. The melody is conjunct and arch counter. The harmony is consonance and seems to go from minor to major. The dynamics are soft with the volume in mezzo-piano and pitch in A. ii. 0:30-Texture is imitation and rhythm is triple meter. Melody is arch counter and conjunct. Harmony is in major and consonance. Dynamics switch to loud and volume is mezzo-forte with a pitch at A. iii. 0:57- The texture changes to counterpoint. The rhythm switches suddenly to duple meter. The melody also changes to inversion retrograde and conjunct. The harmony is dissonance. Dynamics are loud and volume is in forte and pitch is B. iv. 1:17- Texture is back to imitation and rhythm goes back to triple meter. Melody is arch counter and conjunct. Harmony finds resolution from dissonance to consonance. Pitch is in A, volume is piano and dynamics are soft. v. 1:38- Texture is imitation and rhythm is triple meter but switches suddenly to duple meter. Melody is disjunct and inversion retrograde. Harmony changes to dissonance and minor. Pitch unexpectedly changes to C. Volume is forte and the dynamics are loud. Meyers vi. 5 2:10-The texture is imitation and rhythm is back to triple meter. Melody goes back to like the beginning of the composition, conjunct and arch counter. Harmony also goes back to like the beginning of the composition, consonance and major. Pitch goes back to A and volume to mezzo-piano. The dynamics are soft again as it smoothly goes into the cadence. “Symphony No.5” The form for this composition is Sonata Allegro. There is an exposition, development, and the recapitulation. Sonata Allegro form is a combination of binary and ternary forms. i. 0:00-Introduction- The texture is counterpoint and the rhythm is triple meter. Melody is disjunct and arch counter. Harmony is minor and dissonance. Pitch is in B and volume is forte, it starts out loud and strong then goes to diminuendo. ii. 0:25- The texture is counterpoint and the rhythm is triple meter. Melody is arch counter and conjunct. Harmony is minor and consonance. Pitch is in A and volume goes from piano and crescendos to forte. The dynamics are soft to loud. iii. 0:50- Texture is counterpoint and rhythm is duple meter. Melody is arch counter and conjunct. Harmony goes from minor to major and is consonance. Pitch is A and volume is piano. The dynamics are soft. iv. 1:18-The texture is counterpoint and the rhythm is duple meter. Melody is disjunct and inversion retrograde. Harmony is major and dissonance. Pitch is A to B. Volume is forte and the dynamics are loud. v. 2:00- Texture is counterpoint and rhythm is duple meter. Melody is disjunct and arch counter. Harmony is minor and dissonance. Pitch is B and volume is forte and dynamics are loud. vi. 2:32- The texture is counterpoint and rhythm is duple meter. Melody is disjunct and arch counter. Harmony is minor and dissonance. Pitch is A and volume is forte. The dynamics are loud going into cadence, and then slow down to soft. vii. 3:00- The texture is counterpoint. Rhythm is duple meter. Melody is disjunct and arch counter. Harmony is major/minor and dissonance. The dynamics go from soft to loud, crescendo. viii. 3:30-The texture is counterpoint. The rhythm is duple meter. The melody is conjunct. Up down up down up down. Loud to soft. ix. 4:00- The texture is counterpoint. The melody is disjunct. The harmony is minor. The dynamics loud. The rhythm is duple meter. x. 4:25- Dynamics switch to soft. The texture is counterpoint. The melody is conjunct. The harmony is minor and consonance. The rhythm is duple meter. xi. 5:00- the texture is counterpoint. The rhythm is duple meter. The melody is disjunct and then switches back to conjunct. The harmony is minor to major. The dynamics are loud to soft, diminuendo. xii. 5:30- The texture is counterpoint. The rhythm is duple meter. The harmony is major dissonance. The melody is conjunct. The dynamics are loud. Climbing back up to major. xiii. 6:00- The texture is counterpoint. The dynamics are loud. The melody is disjunct. The harmony is dissonance. The rhythm is duple meter. xiv. 6:30-The texture is counterpoint. The dynamics are loud. The melody is disjunct. The harmony is minor. The rhythm is duple meter. Meyers xv. 7:00- The texture is counterpoint. The rhythm is duple meter. The harmony is disjunct. The melody is minor. The dynamics are soft to loud at cadence. 6 Meyers Works Cited Greene, Aaron “About.com- Classical Music, “Fur Elise”, By Ludwig van Beethoven”Copyright 2013 About.com http://classicalmusic.about.com/od/onestopbeethoven/qt/beethove-fur-elise.htm Greene, Aaron “About.com-Classical Music, Brief Histories of Beethoven Symphonies” Copyright-2013 About.com http://classicalmusic.about.com/od/onestopbeethoven/a/beethovensympho.htm Muntaneu, Iullan “All About Beethoven”- Copyright, All About Beethoven 2004-2006 Ver.5.0Onesti, Romania http://www.all-about-beethoven.com/moonsonata.html Networks, A+E “Ludwig van Beethoven. Biography- Copyright 1996-2013 A+E Television Networks, LLC All rights reserved http://www.biography.com/people/ludwig-van-beethoven-9204862 Prevot, Dominique “Ludwig van Beethoven’s Biography”- CopyrightDepot.com-00033548LVBeethoven.com -February 2000 http://www.lvbeethoven.com/Bio/BiographyLudwig.html 7 Meyers 8 WebCOM Online music book -“Listen to the Music” Kendall Hunt Publishing Company copyright 2002-2013 The Three Periods of Beethoven “The Three Periods of Beethoven” http://www.lcsproductions.net/MusicHistory/MusHistRev/Articles/Beethv nPeriods.html