Ludwig Van Beethoveen was born in 1770 in Bonn,
Germany as the son of a court musician. At a very early age, Beethoven
received violin and piano lessons from his father Johann.
He suffered a tragic childhood. His father was an alcoholic and often abused him.
Johann would force Ludwig to practice all of the time, and when
Beethoven would make a mistake he would slam the piano cover on his
knuckles and make him play it over again. His childhood and adolescence
were difficult due to his father’s harsh discipline and alcoholism.
At the age of 8, he studied theory and keyboard with
van den Eeden (former chapel organist). He also studied with several
local organists, received piano lessons from Tobias Friedrich Pfeiffer,
and Franz Rovantini gave him violin and viola lessons. Although Beethoven’s musical genius was compared to that of Mozart’s, his education never exceeded elementary level.
Ludwig van
Beethoven was told by one of his teachers that he had no future career
as a composer. Little did he know that Beethoven would go on to be one
of the greatest classical music composers of all time.
Beethoven
gave his first public appearance (playing piano) when he was eight and
had his first piece of music published by the time he was 12 years old.
His father Johann was increasingly becoming worse and
worse with his drinking and lost his job as a tenor at the Electoral
court. Beethoven, realizing that he now had to support himself and his
brothers, sought work, and by 1782 he served as deputy organist when
Christian Neefe (Court Organist) took leave. By this time, Beethoven was
already composing works and was considered to be a piano virtuoso, and
the next year, Ludwig was hired as orchestral harpsichordist at the
court.
As a teen, he performed more than he composed. In
1787, Neefe sent him to Vienna and he met and briefly studied with
Mozart. Two weeks later, he returned home because his
mother had tuberculosis. She died in July. His father took to drink,
and Beethoven, only 19, petitioned to be recognized as the head of the
house; he received half of his father’s salary to support his family.
In 1792, Beethoven relocated to Vienna. This is the
beginning of his early period which lasted roughly until 1800. During
this time Beethoven quickly made a name for himself as a virtuoso
pianist. He used his abilities at the piano to gain favour with the
nobility. His compositions during this period consisted mainly of works
for his main instrument, the piano. An example of a piece composed
during this time is the Pathétique Sonata, Op. 13 (1798).
Beethoven really didn’t have a steady job. He made
most of his money by playing the piano in Salons at gatherings and
giving piano lessons to wealthy students. Basically, Beethoven was one
of the first freelance composers in Vienna. Beethoven quickly gained
popularity in the Vienna court and in the town. He often challenged
people to test their musical ability.
Once establishing himself, he began composing more.
In 1800, he performed his first symphony and a septet (op. 20).
Publishers soon began to compete for his newest works.
It is relevant at this time to include a few words
about Beethoven’s compositional processes. Mozart was able to get on a
train, a few hours later get off with a whole opera composed in his
head. Beethoven couldn’t do that. In fact every phrase, every note was
like pulling teeth. Beethoven never had less than one composition going
on at the same time. He used sketch books to write down his ideas when
they flew into his head, before he forgot them. Even after he had an
idea, he had to work it out just right. What resulted was a mess of
erasures and scribbles on a piece of paper that a copyist would later
have to decipher.
He began hearing buzzing noises around 1796. He began
losing his hearing around 1798. By 1801, however, he had lost 60% of
his hearing and became a social recluse because, as a musician and
composer, he hated to tell people he was going deaf. By 1816, his
hearing loss was nearly 100%.
At first the malady was intermittent or so faint that
it worried him only occasionally. But by 1801 he reported that a
whistle and a buzz was constant. Low speech tones became an
unintelligible hum, shouting became an intolerable din. Apparently the
illness completely swamped delicate sounds and distorted strong ones. He
may have had short periods of remission, but for the last ten years of
his life he was totally deaf.
He was very upset by this so much so that he thought of ending his life.
Beethoven’s social life was affected the most. He is said to have had
sudden bursts of anger, insulting those around him. As his hearing
became worse, Beethoven went into seclusion from both the public and his
friends. He only communicated with visitors and trusted friends by
writing.
He even considered suicide because of his deafness
and his inability to perform at public concerts which were a great
source of money. After all, Beethoven too was a human.
Beethoven lost his hearing and went deaf but continued to compose music. Hard to believe? It’s completely true!
After
he became deaf, he started to observe the vibrations of piano.
Beethovan noticed that he could not hear high notes when playing piano.
To hear his own compositions, he sawed the legs off of his piano and
placed the piano on the floor, and pressed his ear to the floor as well.
He would then proceed to bang on the keys, to hear what he had written.
The important
thing is that Beethoven did not give up and realized that he had to
face the truth and continue living his dream of composing music. Even
Beethoven’s deafness was not enough to be an obstacle large enough to
block his path of success.
Determined to overcome his disability, he wrote
symphonies 2, 3, and 4 before 1806. The late period saw the compositions
of Beethoven’s largest works: the Mass in D (Missa Solemnis), Op. 123
(1818-23), the 9th Symphony (Choral), Op. 125 (1818-23), the
Hammerklavier Sonata, Op. 106 (1818), and the late string quartets.
Beethoven’s fame began to pay off; he soon found
himself prosperous. His symphonic works proved to be master pieces along
with his other works,
In 1809, however, his musical output began to drop,
possibly in connection to his declining health and mental state. Around
1815 the famous Immortal Beloved affair occured which left Beethoven in
deep depression and contemplating suicide. Beethoven loved a woman named
Fanny, but never married.
Beethoven’s output was mostly null until 1818. At
this point he was completely deaf and slightly mad. Also his brother
died leaving Beethoven’s only nephew, Karl, in the guardianship of his
mother. Now Beethoven felt that she was not fit to raise Karl, so he
entered into a vicious lawsuit over custody of the child. For the most
part he was able to use his influence with the aristocracy to win the
battle. Unfortunately Beethoven was not a fit father and his
relationship with Karl was quite poor, driving him to an suicide attempt
a few years later. Beethoven loved Karl dearly, and the pain of his
failed attempts to teach Karl music must have been devastating for
Beethoven. It’s often speculated that Karl was probably a strong
contributor to Beethoven’s late style.
Beethoven was seriously ill. In 1827, he died of dropsy at the age of 56.
To many, Beethoven represents the highest level of
musical genius keeping in mind composers such as: Bach, Mozart, Handel,
and Haydn. Beethoven’s life was
very productive, given that he had no formal education past the 5th
grade, and of all of his hardships in which he had to deal with.
Beethoven saw
his deafness as a challenge to be fought and overcome. His stubborn
nature strengthened him and he came to terms with his deafness in a
dynamic, constructive way to become world famous composer.
- Quotes of Beethoven
“Recommend to your children virtues, that alone can make them happy, not gold.”
“Then let us all do what is right, strive with all
our might toward the unattainable, develop as fully as we can the gifts
God has given us, and never stop learning”
“To play without passion is inexcusable!”
“This is the mark of a really admirable man: steadfastness in the face of trouble.”
Beethoven speaking to royalty: “What you are, you are
by accident of birth; what I am, I am by myself. There are and will be a
thousand princes; there is only one Beethoven.”
“The barriers are not erected which can say to aspiring talents and industry, “Thus far and no farther.”
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