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    Grosse Fugue


    Listening to this the other day, I really felt that it belonged with Op.130, although the new finale works perfectly well, and no one would think anything of it had the grosse fugue not existed. Beethoven was reported to be furious when the fugue failed to be appreciated and must have reluctantly agreed to replace it. I think it is the grosse fugue that suffers by being a separate entity, rather than the quartet with an alternative finale.

    Mozart's fugue in C minor for 2 pianos (k.426) (which he arranged for string quartet) - a work which Beethoven copied out - is similarly 'shocking and modern' - anyone who thinks Mozart only wrote pretty music should listen to it!

    ------------------
    'Man know thyself'
    'Man know thyself'

    #2
    [QUOTE]Originally posted by Peter:
    [B]
    "Beethoven was reported to be furious when the fugue failed to be appreciated-"

    Have heard the GROSSE FUGUE many, many, times - but, must say that it fails to move
    me. It just goes on and on - a one track train.
    A discrete -stand alone - fugue, does not appear as a spellbinding music format.
    Am I missing something and/or being musically naive??

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by Peter:

      Listening to this the other day, I really felt that it belonged with Op.130, although the new finale works perfectly well, and no one would think anything of it had the grosse fugue not existed. Beethoven was reported to be furious when the fugue failed to be appreciated and must have reluctantly agreed to replace it. I think it is the grosse fugue that suffers by being a separate entity, rather than the quartet with an alternative finale.


      We've discussed this before! I think that Beethoven only agreed to substitute the finale of op.130, for "those cattle, those asses" who couldn't take to the Great Fugue, because he was tired of the struggles of his life, & was probably looking forward to his departure from it. The younger Beethoven, I'm sure, would have fought, tooth & nail, to keep his original concept intact. I like to think that he'd have hoped, one day, to have the fugue restored to the quartet, & even though I, too, love the substitute rondo, it's a shame that the quartet & fugue are still like an estranged family!!


      Mozart's fugue in C minor for 2 pianos (k.426) (which he arranged for string quartet) - a work which Beethoven copied out - is similarly 'shocking and modern' - anyone who thinks Mozart only wrote pretty music should listen to it!
      Mozart rescored his fugue for string orchestra, & prefaced it with an Adagio (K.546) 5 years after the two pianos version, which itself was written after Mozart had actually stopped composing for a while (!), to devote himself to a consistent study of the contrapuntal works of Bach & Handel (among others). Mozart's Fugue is great, but not as great as THE Great Fugue!

      ------------------
      PDG (Peter)

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by PDG:
        Mozart rescored his fugue for string orchestra, & prefaced it with an Adagio (K.546) 5 years after the two pianos version, which itself was written after Mozart had actually stopped composing for a while (!), to devote himself to a consistent study of the contrapuntal works of Bach & Handel (among others). Mozart's Fugue is great, but not as great as THE Great Fugue!
        Yes, we have discussed this before, and you will recall that I mentioned that the sketches revealed that the fugue itself was a departure from B's original intentions, which were rather more in line with the replacement. B's relative youth at the time of the Waldstein did not prevent him from replacing it's original andante on the advice of his friends. The fugue on its own is not perhaps an ideal situation, though I think it has sufficiant contrasts to stand on its own - B wrote a lone fuge for string quintet in 1817, so there is a precedent for such a thing

        ------------------
        "If I were but of noble birth..." - Rod Corkin
        http://classicalmusicmayhem.freeforums.org

        Comment


          #5
          Surely the difference between Beethoven's thinking on the replacement mvts of, respectively, the Waldstein & the Grosse Fuge, is that with the Waldstein, he accepted that the change was for the best - he was under no duress in making the substitution. This is not the case with the Grosse Fuge.

          ------------------
          PDG (Peter)

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by PDG:
            Surely the difference between Beethoven's thinking on the replacement mvts of, respectively, the Waldstein & the Grosse Fuge, is that with the Waldstein, he accepted that the change was for the best - he was under no duress in making the substitution. This is not the case with the Grosse Fuge.

            I agree PDG, although my position has changed because I recall disagreeing with you about this before! I do think the fugue belongs to the quartet and that it is the fugue that suffers rather than the quartet as a result of its absence.

            ------------------
            'Man know thyself'
            'Man know thyself'

            Comment


              #7
              Originally posted by PDG:
              . Mozart's Fugue is great, but not as great as THE Great Fugue!

              I agree, but the point is that both works are quite astoudingly modern - and Mozart wrote his in 1783! Neither is typical of their composer, and if you didn't know, it would be impossible to guess that they were written by Mozart and Beethoven respectively. They sound almost 20th century!

              Incidentally, not only has the Grosse fugue been scored for string orchestra by Weingartner, but it has also been arranged for string quartet and string orchestra by Meirion Bowen - has anyone heard that version?
              ------------------
              'Man know thyself'

              [This message has been edited by Peter (edited 05-04-2001).]
              'Man know thyself'

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by aqua:

                Have heard the GROSSE FUGUE many, many, times - but, must say that it fails to move
                me. It just goes on and on - a one track train.
                A discrete -stand alone - fugue, does not appear as a spellbinding music format.
                Am I missing something and/or being musically naive??
                It is an incredibly difficult work to listen to even today - no wonder they were bemused back in the 1820's! I've heard it referred to as the ugliest piece of music ever written (meant as a compliment!)- by a contemporary critic reviewing Schoenberg! I've also come across this poem by an anonymous author :

                'Beauty is Beethoven's Grosse Fugue
                swirling like a desperate dare that beats
                th'Wings of its unique existence

                between Fixity's defeats
                towards some yet staggering Triumph

                over th'teet'ring Turbulence which pits
                the heavenly black angels of The Light
                forever against the hellish demons of the Right

                and the Fall is Beauty, like (the) Beethoven
                Grosse Fugue, which sinking into itself

                yet leaves many a stopgap rope (of final resort)
                like a bursting Hope (woven from th'articles of its
                dependence

                --Leaves over) leaves
                over Death's empty prophecy:

                Spring's fateful rhetorics

                peaking over long ago's relics
                like phantom figures & ghosts of structures
                of crumbling bricks, because

                O a desperate daring's Beauty
                blossoming upon Death's utter edge

                while Dissolution's cavalry there passes
                to the inner order of The Mind (part

                resignation) beyond which none trespasses

                but with that violation Man falls
                to the confusion of his Self-assertion

                between th'Chasm of Trust & Truth
                that's
                Interpretation

                falls Beauty:

                to cement
                with eloquent extinguishment

                ( born of the moment that it spent
                like some immortal accident )

                the most evident torment of
                its violent wonderment.'


                ------------------
                'Man know thyself'
                'Man know thyself'

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by Peter:
                  I agree PDG, although my position has changed because I recall disagreeing with you about this before! I do think the fugue belongs to the quartet and that it is the fugue that suffers rather than the quartet as a result of its absence.
                  I agree. Forgive my vivid imagination here, but the Fugue's wretched, anguished expression sounds to me like a cry in the dark from a discarded, misunderstood, unloved child left to fend for itself; desperate for its sibling movements to return to it; desperate in its need to be a part of the whole again................

                  Beethoven's biggest musical misjudgement, in my view.

                  ------------------
                  PDG (Peter)

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by PDG:

                    Beethoven's biggest musical misjudgement, in my view.

                    I don't see it as a misjudgement as the quartet itself does not suffer - had the fugue not existed, no one would have complained at the new finale which works perfectly well. Beethoven obviously was persuaded that the fugue may hinder the acceptance of the work - no one even today can deny that the fugue is the most difficult music to listen to that Beethoven ever wrote. I think the work should be performed in both versions, rather than playing the fugue separately - fortunately today as most recordings of Op.130 include the Grosse fugue as well, we can programme our CD's to do this so there isn't really a problem!

                    ------------------
                    'Man know thyself'
                    'Man know thyself'

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by Peter:
                      - no one even today can deny that the fugue is the most difficult music to listen to that Beethoven ever wrote.
                      [/B]
                      When I first heard Opus 130 back in 1973 (see the impression it made - I can remember the year!) I kept on playing the substitute finale and ignored the Grosse Fugue, but I do remember reading somewhere (probably the record sleeve notes) that if any piece of music justified the invention of the gramophone, it was the Fugue. After many years, I have found this to be true - and now, more often than not, I listen to the quartet with the fugue finale.
                      I did once find it the most difficult piece B ever wrote but not any longer. I don't claim to be able to understand it all but it now makes MUSICAL sense to me.
                      Incidentally, the two most difficult works for me are the finale of the "Hammerklavier" and the "Diabelli Variations". But I keep on listening .......

                      Michael

                      Comment


                        #12
                        I've got a recording by Juilliard of the op. 130 that keeps the fugue and does not bother with the rondo. I have listened to it all the way through maybe four times because I still can't wrap my head around the whole thing; it is simply beyond me. I can tell there is infinite depth, but I can't yet grasp it. I usu. just stop after the Cavatina now, which works swimmingly for me (I don't yet have a "revised" op. 130 in my collection). But, I hope one day to fully grasp it, and I know it will be a glorious moment.

                        I would think the quartet does not suffer in the least from two diff. endings. If anything, it gives all of us a far more encompassing take on the same opus. n one hand, the piece ends on a sunny, optimistic note; on the other, a leaden, turmoiled, "ugly" contraption of, well, everything you could imagine, I guess. It is a truly miraculous thing. Nowhere I know of did Ludwig say "Now the quartet will end with the new rondo and that's it!" He gave us a choice, and the options could not have been more different. How could the same quartet end so differently?


                        Originally posted by Peter:

                        Mozart's fugue in C minor for 2 pianos (k.426) (which he arranged for string quartet) - a work which Beethoven copied out - is similarly 'shocking and modern' - anyone who thinks Mozart only wrote pretty music should listen to it!

                        Guess what, I'm gonna give 'er a try. But, I had better be really impressed, or that's the end for Mozart!!!!!

                        Comment


                          #13
                          [QUOTE]Originally posted by Serge:
                          How could the same quartet end so differently?

                          This just goes to prove that nothing is pre-ordained in music - had Beethoven listened to critics of the 9th , we may well be having a similar debate about the 'two finales' of that work!

                          Guess what, I'm gonna give 'er a try. But, I had better be really impressed, or that's the end for Mozart!!!!!

                          It's not a work I would introduce anyone to Mozart's music with, anymore than I would Beethoven's with the Grosse fugue. You probably won't like it, but at least you'll have to admit there's a bit more to Mozart than easy 'nice' music!



                          ------------------
                          'Man know thyself'
                          'Man know thyself'

                          Comment


                            #14
                            One can only conclude that in his anger at the non-acceptance of the Grosse Fuge, Beethoven, in changeing the profile of the quartet with the new finale, was making merciless fun of his critics, akin to: "Now try not liking THIS!!"

                            Serge, please don't judge Mozart on his Fugue - you just won't like it!! Try instead his D minor piano concerto, K.466; even better, the version with Beethoven's cadenzas. It's on Naxos, & you don't even have to look at the cover

                            ------------------
                            PDG (Peter)

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Originally posted by PDG:
                              Surely the difference between Beethoven's thinking on the replacement mvts of, respectively, the Waldstein & the Grosse Fuge, is that with the Waldstein, he accepted that the change was for the best - he was under no duress in making the substitution. This is not the case with the Grosse Fuge.

                              Of course B would have not changed the Waldstein if he did not see the benefits to be gained from such a change. With op130, if B had insisted the fugue remain as the finale I'm sure he would have got his way.

                              ------------------
                              "If I were but of noble birth..." - Rod Corkin

                              [This message has been edited by Rod (edited 05-05-2001).]
                              http://classicalmusicmayhem.freeforums.org

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