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Was Beethoven Nationalist or Universalist?

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    Was Beethoven Nationalist or Universalist?

    The point of my question is "Was Beethoven just Universalist, a man with a love for all human being across the borders and continents."
    The phrases show Universalistic Beethoven such as "Tochter aus Elysium
    , Alle Menschen, Himmlische dein Heiligtum, etc." in nineth sympony.
    But his many masterpieces were dedicated to Prince Carl von Lichnowsky, Baron von Swieten, Prince Lobkowitz, Count Oppersdorf, Count Razumowsky, Friedrich Wilhelm II(Prussia), Baron Gleichenstein, Archduke Rudolph Prince Lichnowsky, and so on.
    Was These dedication just due to his patronages or friendships?
    Is there any traces of Nationalistic affairs in Beethoven's music and life?

    I hope many basis, data, arguments about my question.



    ------------------
    Wohltuen, wo man kann,
    Freiheit, ueber alles lieben,
    Wahrheit nie, auch sogar am
    Thorne nicht verleugnen.

    HwaDam

    [This message has been edited by HwaDam (edited 11-15-2000).]
    Wohltuen, wo man kann,
    Freiheit, ueber alles lieben,
    Wahrheit nie, auch sogar am
    Thorne nicht verleugnen.

    HwaDam

    #2
    I have never got the impression that nationalism of any kind played a significant role in Beethoven's mindset, which was borne out of the Enlightenment and the French Revolution. However he was not strictly a lover of 'all men' in my opinion. He would readily curse the more common element of Viennese street life, whilst at the same time he was as best ambivalent about the aristocracy, despite the great assistance he may have gained from them. Basically I think he judged people by his own moral and political standards regardless of their origin. He would compose to the honour of the French Revolution - 'Erioca', 'Leonore', or the English beating the French - 'Wellington's Victory', or the Austrians just being full of themselves - 'The Glorious Moment', as the political and commercial situation suited him.

    I believe B may have looked at Schillers Ode (or rather the sections of it he selected for the 9th) from a deeply personal perspective, at least latently, rather than the whole world kissing and cuddling, which I suspect even B would have thought too much to expect.

    On occasion I have got the impression that B's fantasy world would have been akin to that of Plato's 'Republic', with a moraly strong but sincere (and artistic?) ruling class, who were an example for the lower classes to follow. I think the US could do with a dose of this right now - forget democracy!

    Rod

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

    Comment


      #3

      I think Beethoven was really an idealist - His music represents these ideals of course, and in that I would describe him as a universalist, not a nationalist.

      With regard to the dedications, Beethoven knew how to play the aristocracy to his advantage - Although he was on friendly terms with many of them, we know that his sympathies were Republican.

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

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by Peter:

        I think Beethoven was really an idealist - His music represents these ideals of course, and in that I would describe him as a universalist, not a nationalist.

        Broadly I agree, but taking the use of Schiller's Ode in mind, which B had considered using throughout his compositional life, I suspect he would view it from a somewhat different perspective in his earlier days to what he did at the time of the 9th Symphony. The universal idealism would have been stronger in the younger man, whereas in the 9th the use of the Ode clearly reflects Beethovens personal priorities at that time as with other late works of his (though still of course with the univeral element playing its part). In a sence I suggest B was always to a certain extent living on past glories - the days of Enlightenment and revolution were gone by the time the Eroica was completed, never mind the 5th Symphony. So from what perspective must we view the 9th. By this time he must have been fighting for himself?

        Rod

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

        Comment


          #5
          Idealism is always stronger in a young man - Then disallusionment and reality set in - I am now a 38yr old cynic (not the right way to be - but a necessary phase I suspect) - I think the next stage will be acceptance. I don't think Beethoven was fighting by the time of the 9th - he had reached the final stage.His greatest battle was at the time of the Heiligenstadt Testament , and he won. Idealim,Cynicism,acceptance - I think they are the 3 phases of a man's life !

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

          Comment


            #6
            Originally posted by Peter:
            Idealism is always stronger in a young man - Then disallusionment and reality set in - I am now a 38yr old cynic (not the right way to be - but a necessary phase I suspect) - I think the next stage will be acceptance. I don't think Beethoven was fighting by the time of the 9th - he had reached the final stage.His greatest battle was at the time of the Heiligenstadt Testament , and he won. Idealim,Cynicism,acceptance - I think they are the 3 phases of a man's life !
            Mmm..Pete the philosopher! Acceptance of the harsh realities of life is fine in the 3rd stage, but after this one must confront the harsher realities of death and never to be fulfilled dreams. The conflict and introspection of the last works may have been a result of this. But here Beethoven triumphs also - as we can see in the 9th. In his most subjective piece, the 'arioso dolente' and fugue of op110, Beethoven secure in his ultimate triumph, was not ashamed to display all of his gaping wounds from the battle that got him there.

            I would put myself in the second stage also, but I'm not sure if I was ever in the first! Therefore I create a 4th stage for people like me - Demigod. You'll all be in trouble when I reath the 5th.

            Rod

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

            Comment


              #7
              You're really serious when you say that, aren't you, Rod?

              I think it is unlikely Beethoven was making a statement in his late music, or trying to rediscover past glories in the 9th (why would he bother? He didn't really care what others thought of him). B.'s last music was written to satisfy one person: himself. He had commissions but took forever to respond to them, so it's not like money was a factor (besides, B. died relatively well-off thanks to his bank shares). I'm certain he wrote for an audience of one when he himslf was the only person he could turn to.

              Comment


                #8

                Beethoven had never been a 'populist'composer,so there was nothing new in that. I do think money was still a concern for B - remember in 1823 he was forced to sell one of his bank shares (which he was saving for Karl)- remember also how B reacted to the news of the profits from the 2 performances of the 9th. He was also doing some pretty underhand negotiations with publishers as well !

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

                Comment


                  #9
                  Beethoven: individualist - universalist

                  In a sence I suggest B was always to a certain extent living on past glories - the days of Enlightenment and revolution were gone by the time the Eroica was completed, never mind the 5th Symphony. So from what perspective must we view the 9th. By this time he must have been fighting for himself?
                  (Rod)

                  I don't think Beethoven was fighting by the time of the 9th - he had reached the final stage. His greatest battle was at the time of the Heiligenstadt Testament, and he won.
                  (Peter)

                  Acceptance of the harsh realities of life is fine in the 3rd stage, but after this one must confront the harsher realities of death and never to be fulfilled dreams. The conflict and introspection of the last works may have been a result of this. But here Beethoven triumphs also - as we can see in the 9th.
                  (Rod)
                  ------------------------

                  How to interpret the ninth symphony? Is that the question? Whether its content is biographical or if does it represent a message for the whole humanity? Well, I would not say “or” but “and” instead.
                  The past glories had disappeared of the composer's mind, perhaps, but the fact that the idea of the ode has been planned so time ago in B’s life makes us not characterize this like a typical last period B work.

                  Rod says:
                  Acceptance of the harsh realities of life is dies in the 3rd stage, but after this one must confront the harsher realities of death and never to be fulfilled dreams.

                  Ok. But I don't consider these topics as being invoked/evoked in this symphony as they were it in the last two piano sonatas or in the later quartets.

                  I cannot say if all the suffering and conflict expressed at the symphony was individual or not. I mean, if B was thinking of his own sufferings and his individual triumph over them or the triumph of the whole humanity. Introspective it could have been but not exclusively biographical. It indeed has a message, and the work it seems in all sense like a last wise legacy.

                  Seid umschlungen, Millionen. (You millions, I embrace you
                  Diesen Kuß der ganzen Welt! This kiss is for all the world!)

                  Was die Mode streng geteilt (All that custom has divided,
                  Alle Menschen werden Brüder All men become brothers)

                  In this sense, it can be that from his individual position as a man who has triumphed over all type of distresses tries to leave a hopeful message.
                  In what measure this message is “revolutionary” or " conformist " is another thing that we cannot settle down easily and there are indications of both. *

                  For example in one of the most moving passages:

                  Laufet, Brüder, eure Bahn, (Thus, brothers, you should run your race,
                  Freudig, wie ein Held zum Siegen As to hero going to victory!)

                  And after this comes the dramatic double fugue (previous to the choir explosion) that represents conflict, fight, intent after intent until getting the victory. (listen to it!)

                  On the other hand, besides this aspect, the message points maybe (and here without any doubt, fruit of an introspection) to simply enjoy the everyday life. (as B didn’t and he is complaining at this stage of his life?)

                  Wem der große Wurf gelungen, Whoever has created
                  Eines Freundes Freund zu sein, An abiding friendship,
                  Wer ein holdes Weib errungen,i Or has won
                  Mische seinen Jubel ein! A true and loving wife,
                  Ja, wer auch nur eine Seele All who can call at least one soul theirs,
                  Sein nennt auf dem Erdenrund! Join our song of praise;
                  Und wer's nie gekonnt, der stehle But those who cannot must creep tearfully
                  Weinend sich aus diesem Bund. Away from our circle.

                  On the religious message involved in the work I leave the place to somebody better qualified than me to understand these matters.

                  ---------------------
                  * I used to like thinking in the first sense. And, returning to the topic of the man stages, I am on a painful transition from idealism to whoever knows

                  Well, that’s all for now. Let me know what you think.
                  Buy this before saying you don't like Mahler:
                  http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000001G96/qid=983416747/sr=1-1/ref=sc_m_1/104-8436844-5169509
                  You'll thank me later...

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by Luis:
                    How to interpret the ninth symphony? Is that the question? Whether its content is
                    biographical or if does it represent a message for the whole humanity? Well, I would not say “or” but “and” instead. The past glories had disappeared of the composer's mind, perhaps, but the fact that the idea of the ode has been planned so time ago in B’s life makes us not characterize this like a typical last period B work.

                    Rod says:
                    Acceptance of the harsh realities of life is dies in the 3rd stage, but after this one must
                    confront the harsher realities of death and never to be fulfilled dreams.

                    Ok. But I don't consider these topics as being invoked/evoked in this symphony as they were it in the last two piano sonatas or in the later quartets.

                    I cannot say if all the suffering and conflict expressed at the symphony was individual or not. I mean, if B was thinking of his own sufferings and his individual triumph over them or the triumph of the whole humanity. Introspective it could have been but not
                    exclusively biographical. It indeed has a message, and the work it seems in all sense
                    like a last wise legacy.)
                    I also stated that the universal message is still to be found in the ninth, but that at this time some parts of the Ode had more of a personal significance than would have been the case in the 1790's. There certainly is conflict, introspection and resolution in the 9th as far as I can hear! Much the same can be said the Missa Solemnis, though at the end the emotion is one of only guarded hope rather than resolution, which is interesting. I never suggested that there was a biographical programme to the 9th - B was never that one dimentional a composer.

                    Rod

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

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by Serge:
                      You're really serious when you say that, aren't you, Rod?
                      B]


                      Yes...yet on the other hand....

                      Originally posted by Serge:
                      I think it is unlikely Beethoven was making a statement in his late music, or trying to rediscover past glories in the 9th (why would he bother? He didn't really care what others thought of him). B.'s last music was written to satisfy one person: himself. He had commissions but took forever to respond to them, so it's not like money was a factor (besides, B. died relatively well-off thanks to his bank shares). I'm certain he wrote for an audience of one when he himslf was the only person he could turn to.
                      By past glories, I didn't mean B's own musical past glories, but rather the political past glories of the French revolution and the Enlightenment that were an important influence on Beethoven, but became less relevant as time progressed politically. I mean I doubt the 9th could be regarded as a 'herioc' work on the context of revolutionary heroes as those days were long gone by the time it was composed. Thus I suggested that B's motivation may have been more personally orientated with the 9th, but I'm not particularly making an issue of this point.

                      Rod


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

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Originally posted by Rod:
                        (...) In his most subjective piece, the 'arioso dolente' and fugue of op110, Beethoven secure in his ultimate triumph, was not ashamed to display all of his gaping wounds from the battle that got him there.

                        What do you know about the meaning of this sonata or this particular movement that make you say that? On my CD notes says that first B seems to be “remembering the days when he could live in a full possessions of all his senses”, then, on the adagio ma non troppo and airoso dolente, it assumes the form of a kind of personal confession, to finally endow the fugue as a final liberation from his painful experiences by either religion or music. Have you heard something about all this? Anything else to add?
                        Buy this before saying you don't like Mahler:
                        http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000001G96/qid=983416747/sr=1-1/ref=sc_m_1/104-8436844-5169509
                        You'll thank me later...

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Originally posted by Luis:
                          Originally posted by Rod:
                          (...) In his most subjective piece, the 'arioso dolente' and fugue of op110, Beethoven secure in his ultimate triumph, was not ashamed to display all of his gaping wounds from the battle that got him there.

                          What do you know about the meaning of this sonata or this particular movement that make you say that? On my CD notes says that first B seems to be “remembering the days when he could live in a full possessions of all his senses”, then, on the adagio ma non troppo and airoso dolente, it assumes the form of a kind of personal confession, to finally endow the fugue as a final liberation from his painful experiences by either religion or music. Have you heard something about all this? Anything else to add?
                          The angst in this movement seems to have a deep unusually subjective nature even by B's standards, yet it ends in a flurry of unsurpassed triumph. Make of it what you will!

                          Rod

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

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Thank you for your replies, Mr. Luis, Peter, Rod, Serge.

                            I had found this site a few weeks age. This page is so good and useful.
                            Wohltuen, wo man kann,
                            Freiheit, ueber alles lieben,
                            Wahrheit nie, auch sogar am
                            Thorne nicht verleugnen.

                            HwaDam

                            Comment


                              #15
                              This is a thread that I read with
                              much interest, because it shows the depth
                              and scope of knowledge in this site.
                              With that I must ask innocently (I have only
                              read two LvB biographies) if Beethoven was not a Universalist, and he had grown cynical
                              in his views of mankind in his latter years, then why did
                              he bother to include Schiller's Ode to Joy
                              chorale mvt in the ninth, which he must have known in his heart would be his crowning achievement, and lasting gift to mankind? (OK, that's subjective, on my part)
                              Wasn't this usage of choir unprecedented insofar as symphonies go, before that time?~

                              Comment

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