BIOGRAPHY
Bronze statue (1880) in the Beethovenplatz,Vienna
He
was born in the German town of Bonn on the 16th of December 1770. His grandfather
Ludwig and his father Johann were both musicians.
Johann was to act as little Ludwig's first music
teacher, but Ludwig soon changed to the court
organist C. G. Neefe. Passing eleven years of age,
Ludwig deputized for Neefe, and at twelve had
his first music published. He then stayed as Neefe's
assistant until 1787, when at seventeen, he took
off for Vienna. Even though Vienna was to be his home
for the rest of his life, this first visit was
short. On hearing that his mother was dying, he quickly
returned to Bonn. Five years later he finally
moved to Vienna to live and work.
After arriving in 1792 he studied composition
and counterpoint under
Haydn, Schenk, Salieri and Albrechtsberger. At
the same time, he tried
to establish himself as pianist and composer.
His good relations with
the towns aristocracy soon led to a secured income.
In 1809, with the
sole condition that he stayed in Vienna, Prince
Kinsky, Prince
Lobkowitz and Archduke Rudolp even guaranteed
Beethoven a yearly
income. But going back to the years around 1800,
which is traditionally
called the early period, he was still trying
to master the high classical
style. This strive culminated in the second symphony
from 1801-1802.
This is also the time when the middle period
starts. From now up
until 1813, Beethoven develops and enhances the
high classical style
into a more dynamic and individualistic style.
It is now that he writes
symphonies Nr. 3 - 8, piano consert Nr. 5 and
a lot of chamber music.
But as he learns to control his craft and develop
the music into new
undiscovered grounds, he also suffers from reminders
of the pains of
real life. He has early in life discovered that
his hearing wasn't what it
should be, and the disorder gets worse as time
goes by. It gets to the
point where Beethoven is thinking of ending his
life as he sees no way
out of his despair. That fact is documented in
the letter he wrote to his
brothers in 1802, the so called "Heiligenstadt
Testament".
This hearing disorder seems to have affected
his social life to a great extent. He became difficult to
handle in social interactions and could suddenly
burst into outbreaks of anger and show bad temper
where he usually insulted someone. If that is
the reason for his troubles with women, or if their is
something traumatic hidden in his childhood,
I don't know, but the fact is that he never got involved with
a woman in a normal relation. Beethoven seems
to have been attracted to women he couldn't get, or at
least was hard to get. An example is Antoine
Brentano, with whom he had a relationship, but who broke
up with him to marry a friend. It is she who
is known as the "immortal beloved" in letters addressed to
her from Beethoven in 1812. Around the same time,
as this wasn't enough, his deafness reached the
stage where he no longer could perform.
Now came a couple of years without much creative
work. Instead he was tormented by personal
matters concerning his nephew of which he tried
to gain custody when the brother died in 1815. But
Beethoven didn't have the capacity of a domestic
human being, and even though he did win the struggle
for custody, Beethovens relation with the nephew
was tense and burdensome and it reached the point
where little Karl tried to take his own life
in 1826. This is also the so called late period in Beethovens
musical career. His music is described as less
dramatic
and more introvert, but also, I would like to
add, more
mature and secure. It has a flavour of the genius
growing
old and an obvious attitude. Listen for example
to
symphony Nr. 9 - it is complete! There is really
not much
to add as I see it. The above mentioned piece
gave him, at
last, at bit of economical success and he could
live his last
years in relative wellfare. But this period is
still
characterized by his lack of funds, much because
his
former patrons no longer could support him. Maybe
the
lifelong poverty is a reason for his deteriorating
health and
his death on March 26 1827.
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