Friday, November 29, 2019
The Life Of Ludwig Van Beethoven Essays (1411 words) -
  The Life of Ludwig Van Beethoven    The Life  of Ludwig Van Beethoven    The rise of Ludwig van Beethoven into the  ranks of history's greatest composers was parallelled by and in some ways  a consequence of his own personal tragedy and despair. Beginning in the  late 1790's, the increasing buzzing and humming in his ears sent Beethoven  into a panic, searching for a cure from doctor to doctor. By October 1802  he had written the Heiligenstadt Testament confessing the certainty of  his growing deafness, his consequent despair, and suicidal considerations.    Yet, despite the personal tragedy caused by the "infirmity in the one sense  which ought to be more perfect in [him] than in others, a sense which [he]  once possessed in the highest perfection, a perfection such as few in [his]  profession enjoy," it also served as a motivating force in that it challenged  him to try and conquer the fate that was handed him. He would not surrender  to that "jealous demon, my wretched health" before proving to himself and  the world the extent of his skill. Thus, faced with such great impending  loss, Beethoven, keeping faith in his art and ability, states in his Heiligenstadt    Testament a promise of his greatness yet to be proven in the development  of his heroic style.    By about 1800, Beethoven was mastering  the Viennese High-Classic style. Although the style had been first perfected  by Mozart, Beethoven did extend it to some degree. He had unprecedently  composed sonatas for the cello which in combination with the piano opened  the era of the Classic-Romantic cello sonata. In addition, his sonatas  for violin and piano became the cornerstone of the sonata duo repertory.    His experimentation with additions to the standard forms likewise made  it apparent that he had reached the limits of the high-Classic style. Having  displayed the extended range of his piano writing he was also begining  to forge a new voice for the violin. In 1800, Beethoven was additionally  combining the sonata form with a full orchestra in his First Symphony,  op. 2. In the arena of piano sonata, he had also gone beyond the three-movement  design of Haydn and Mozart, applying sometimes the four-movement design  reserved for symphonies and quartets through the addition of a minuet or  scherzo. Having confidently proven the high-Classic phase of his sonata  development with the "Grande Sonate," op. 22, Beethoven moved on to the  fantasy sonata to allow himself freer expression. By 1802, he had evidently  succeeded in mastering the high-Classic style within each of its major  instrumental genres-the piano trio, string trio, string quartet and quintet,    Classic piano concerto, duo sonata, piano sonata, and symphony. Having  reached the end of the great Vienese tradition, he was then faced with  either the unchallenging repetition of the tired style or going beyond  it to new creations.    At about the same time that Beethoven had  exhausted the potentials of the high-Classic style, his increasing deafness  landed him in a major cycle of depression, from which was to emerge his  heroic period as exemplified in Symphony No. 3, op. 55 ("Eroica"). In Beethoven's    Heiligenstadt Testament of October 1802, he reveals his malaise that was  sending him to the edge of despair. He speaks of suicide in the same breath  as a reluctance to die, expressing his helplessness against the inevitability  of death. Having searched vainly for a cure, he seems to have lost all  hope-"As the leaves of autumn fall and are withered-so likewise has my  hope been blighted-I leave here-almost as I came-even the high courage-which  often inspired me in the beautiful days of summer-has disappeared." There  is somewhat of a parallel between his personal and professional life. He  is at a dead end on both cases. There seems to be no more that he can do  with the high-Classic style; his deafness seems poised inevitably to encumber  and ultimately halt his musical career. However, despite it all, he reveals  in the Testament a determination, though weak and exhausted, to carry on-"I  would have ended my life-it was only my art that held me back. Ah, it seemed  to me impossible to leave the world until I had brought forth all that    I felt was within me. So I endured this wretched existence..." Realizing  his own potential which he expressed earlier after the completion of the    Second Symphony-"I am only a little satisfied with my previous works"-and  in an 1801 letter-"I will seize Fate by the throat; it shall certainly  not bend and crush me completely"- he decides to go on. At a time when    Beethoven had reached the end of the musical challenge of the day,    
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