the classical symphony - and particularly the sonata movement form, which provides a kind of external schedule for the systematic musical evolution of our inner liberated human strengths.
Thus as far as the optimal musical presentation of the evolution of the liberated inner human strengths was concerned in the symphony our great classical composers concentrated primarily on this first movement, contained in the form of a sonata movement, and then usually attached to this self-contained work, more for general musical edification, three further movements with different tempi. Generally though, these movements were not thematically related to the first movement.
His success with this integration was, however, limited, because the themes of the first three movements and the new theme of the fourth movement were not originally contrapuntally related to one another.
Thus, Beethoven had to line up the themes of the first three movements like momentos in the manner of a potpourri.
Art! Beethoven |
Nevertheless, Beethoven's determined desire for the integral structuring of the symphony as such, is clearly evident in his ninth symphony and in this respect points unequivocally into the future of the symphony as an integral musical unit.
That Beethoven did not and could not succeed with the musical integration of his ninth symphony is down to the fact that this symphony did not originate in his consciousness as a single unit from the very beginning. Instead he created the four movements historically, one after the other and relatively independent of one another.
One should not conclude from
this apparently critical view of Beethoven's endeavour that he was essentially
incapable of realising this, his last great symphonic aim, the unity of the
symphony. As the well-known symphonist least prepared to compromise, Beethoven
did, in the fourth movement of his ninth symphony, at least formulate for
the first time the demand for the musical integration of the entire symphony
as a single unit that is, all four movements of the symphony ,
and one can assume from this, that he would have achieved this in his tenth
symphony.
© A A R E D I T I O N I N T E R N A T I O N A L 2001
Site Map |
Editorial |
about us |
MUSIC |
SYMPHONIC MUSIC |
The
Future of the Classical Symphony |
Peter Hübner |
R & D |
International Experts |
International Media |
Asian Media |
Main Links |
STORE |