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Ludwig Van Beethoven 17701827

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Nine Symphonies, Most famous being the 3rd (Eroica) 5th, 6th (Pastoral), 7th and ... Modulates to C major 3 times for powerful, triumphant fanfare passages ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ludwig Van Beethoven 17701827


1
Ludwig Van Beethoven(1770-1827)
  • The Nineteenth Century

2
Beethoven (1770-1827)
  • Chief Works
  • Nine Symphonies, Most famous being the 3rd
    (Eroica) 5th, 6th (Pastoral), 7th and 9th
    (choral).
  • 17 String Quartets
  • ONE opera (Fidelio)
  • Five Piano Concertos (Including The Emperor (No.
    5)
  • 32 Piano Sonatas (considered to be The New
    Testament for Pianists) Including the
    Pathétique, Moonlight, Appasionata, and
    Hammerklavier.
  • A few sacred works, including mass settings, most
    notably his Missa Solemnis in D

3
Characteristics of Composition
  • Rhythmic Drive
  • Strong Accents
  • Manheim Crescendo
  • Less elegant than his predecesors
  • Motivic Consistancy
  • Can base an entire symphony (all movements) on
    one motivic element (5th Symphony based on 4
    notes)
  • Psychological progression
  • An entire symphony can have a coherent and
    dramatic psychological progression.

4
The Scherzo
  • Beethoven substitutes a scherzo for the
    traditional minuet
  • Italian word scherzo joke
  • Aristocratic minuet too formal
  • Scherzo shares a few features with minuet
  • A B A form triple meter
  • But scherzo was much faster
  • Rhythmic drive frequent syncopation give it a
    brusque, jocular, even violent feel

5
Beethoven, Symphony No. 5, I (1)
  • Motivic consistency prominent here
  • A single rhythmic motive dominates
  • It forms the first theme
  • It initiates the bridge
  • It appears as background to lyrical 2nd theme
  • It emerges again in the cadence material

6
Beethoven, Symphony No. 5, I (2)
  • It is used throughout the development
  • It continues to grow in the long coda
  • Motive gives the work a gripping urgency

7
Beethoven, Symphony No. 5, I (3)
  • Listen for
  • Arresting, primal first statement of Theme 1
    motives separated by fermatas
  • Horn-call bridge announces Theme 2
  • Theme 1 variant announces the development
  • Thematic fragmentation in the development
  • Oboe cadenza in the recapitulation
  • Recapitulations 2nd group in major key
  • LONG, developmental coda with new theme
  • Main motive repeated varied in every bar!

8
The Remaining Movements
  • First movement ends with a standoff at the end of
    a heroic struggle
  • Later movements respond to and resolve this
    struggle
  • The rhythmic motive recurs in each movement to
    remind us of the struggle
  • C minor passages also recall the struggle
  • C major passages point to the ultimate triumph
    over Fate

9
Beethoven, Symphony No. 5, II
  • Double theme variations form
  • Six variations on Theme 1
  • Primary key is A-flat major
  • Modulates to C major 3 times for powerful,
    triumphant fanfare passages
  • Rhythmic motive appears in mysterious
    retransition to A-flat

10
Beethoven, Symphony No. 5, III (1)
  • Scherzo movement in A B A form
  • A section recalls 1st movement
  • Spooky a theme is in C minor with fermata
    interruptions
  • Rhythmic motive dominates forceful b theme

11
Beethoven, Symphony No. 5, III (2)
  • B section (Trio) points to Fates defeat
  • Humorous fugal section in C major
  • Return of A completely transformed
  • Mysterious pizzicato oboe
  • Leads into doubly mysterious transition

12
Beethoven, Symphony No. 5, IV (1)
  • Eerie transition leads directly into IV
  • Rhythmic motive in timpani
  • Music grows gradually louder clearer
  • At climax, full orchestra (with trombones)
    announces marchlike 1st theme of the 4th movement
    in C major
  • Straightforward sonata form movement
  • Theme 2 based on the rhythmic motive

13
Beethoven, Symphony No. 5, IV (2)
  • End of development brings back 3rd movements b
    theme eerie transition
  • A final reminder of the struggle
  • Recapitulation coda provide a great C-major
    celebration
  • No surprises in recapitulation
  • LONG coda in three sections revisits previous
    themes
  • Final section accelerates tempo for a rousing
    Presto finale
  • Ending drives home C major chord

14
Conclusions
  • The dramatic strength rhythmic power of this
    work went far beyond earlier music
  • Beethoven unified the symphony
  • Motives appear in more than one movement
  • Movements can be connected without pause
  • The symphony narrates a dramatic story
  • Beethoven single-handedly changed the nature of
    the symphony genre
  • Never again would the symphony be a simple
    entertainment
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