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Beethoven's Lives
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Beethoven's Lives will be required reading for anyone interested in understanding how Beethoven biography has evolved through the ages.When Ludwig van Beethoven died in March 1827, the world of mus...
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18 September 2020

Beethoven's Lives will be required reading for anyone interested in understanding how Beethoven biography has evolved through the ages.
When Ludwig van Beethoven died in March 1827, the world of music felt an intense loss. The composer's funeral procession was one of the largest Vienna had ever witnessed, and the poet Franz Grillparzer's eulogy brought the tensions between the composer's life and music into sharp focus: the deaf and aloof genius, the alienated and eccentric artist, unable to form a lasting relationship with a woman but reaching out to mankind. These apparent contradictions were to attract many Beethoven biographers yet to come.
Here, Lewis Lockwood, himself a much-lauded Beethoven biographer, tells the story of Beethoven biography, from the earliest attempts made directly after the composer's death to the present day. Beethoven's Lives casts a wide net, tracing the story of Beethoven biography from Anton Schindler as biographer and falsifier, through the authoritative Alexander Wheelock Thayer and down to the present. The list includes Gustav Nottebohm, the first scholar to study Beethoven's sketchbooks. With his work, biography could begin to reflect on the inner life of the artist as expressed in his music, and in this sense, sketchbooks could be seen as artistic diaries. Even Richard Wagner thought of writing a Beethoven biography, and the late nineteenth and early twentieth century saw the emergence of French and English traditions of Beethoven biography.
In the tumultuous twentieth century, with world wars and fractured politics, the writing of Beethoven biography was sometimes caught up in the storm. By bringing the story down to our time, Lewis Lockwood identifies traditions of Beethoven biography that today's scholars and writers need to be aware of. As Lockwood shows, each biography reflects not only on the individual writer's knowledge and interests, but also his inner sense of purpose as each writer works within the intellectual framework of his time.
LEWIS H. LOCKWOOD is one of the leading authorities on Beethoven worldwide. Having taught at Princeton and Harvard, some of his key Beethoven publications include: Beethoven: The Music and the Life (Norton, 2003; translated into many languages), as well as Beethoven's Symphonies: An Artistic Vision (Norton, 2015) and with the Julliard String Quartet: Inside Beethoven's Quartets: History, Performance, Interpretation (Harvard University Press, 2008). He is known for his studies of Beethoven's life and work, including the composer's autograph manuscripts and sketchbooks.
When Ludwig van Beethoven died in March 1827, the world of music felt an intense loss. The composer's funeral procession was one of the largest Vienna had ever witnessed, and the poet Franz Grillparzer's eulogy brought the tensions between the composer's life and music into sharp focus: the deaf and aloof genius, the alienated and eccentric artist, unable to form a lasting relationship with a woman but reaching out to mankind. These apparent contradictions were to attract many Beethoven biographers yet to come.
Here, Lewis Lockwood, himself a much-lauded Beethoven biographer, tells the story of Beethoven biography, from the earliest attempts made directly after the composer's death to the present day. Beethoven's Lives casts a wide net, tracing the story of Beethoven biography from Anton Schindler as biographer and falsifier, through the authoritative Alexander Wheelock Thayer and down to the present. The list includes Gustav Nottebohm, the first scholar to study Beethoven's sketchbooks. With his work, biography could begin to reflect on the inner life of the artist as expressed in his music, and in this sense, sketchbooks could be seen as artistic diaries. Even Richard Wagner thought of writing a Beethoven biography, and the late nineteenth and early twentieth century saw the emergence of French and English traditions of Beethoven biography.
In the tumultuous twentieth century, with world wars and fractured politics, the writing of Beethoven biography was sometimes caught up in the storm. By bringing the story down to our time, Lewis Lockwood identifies traditions of Beethoven biography that today's scholars and writers need to be aware of. As Lockwood shows, each biography reflects not only on the individual writer's knowledge and interests, but also his inner sense of purpose as each writer works within the intellectual framework of his time.
LEWIS H. LOCKWOOD is one of the leading authorities on Beethoven worldwide. Having taught at Princeton and Harvard, some of his key Beethoven publications include: Beethoven: The Music and the Life (Norton, 2003; translated into many languages), as well as Beethoven's Symphonies: An Artistic Vision (Norton, 2015) and with the Julliard String Quartet: Inside Beethoven's Quartets: History, Performance, Interpretation (Harvard University Press, 2008). He is known for his studies of Beethoven's life and work, including the composer's autograph manuscripts and sketchbooks.
Price: $29.95
Pages: 232
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: Boydell Press
Publication Date:
18 September 2020
Trim Size: 8.50 X 5.43 in
ISBN: 9781783275519
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Music, Biography: arts and entertainment, MUSIC / Genres & Styles / Classical, MUSIC / History & Criticism, Composers and songwriters, Musicians, singers, bands and groups, Art music, orchestral and formal music
Remarkably, Lockwood manages to offer something meaningful about the strengths and limitations of a vast literature of Beethoven biographies by German, Austrian, American, French, and British authors. With each biography, Lockwood tells us how (and if) a biography advances knowledge and understanding of Beethoven in its own time (and in some cases far beyond). Throughout, readers learn how biographers reflect the biases of their time and cultural milieu. . . . In short, Lockwood's brief but meaningful Lives seems to support the Latin adage upon which Beethoven based three musical canons: "Ars longa, vita brevis."
— Geoffrey Block
— Geoffrey Block
The Earliest Biographers
Beethoven Biography, 1840-c.1875
The Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries
Beethoven Biography and European Politics, 1933-1977
The Modern Era
Exploring Beethoven's Life and Work: Three Sample Years
Reminiscences and Reflections
Bibliography
Index
Beethoven Biography, 1840-c.1875
The Late Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries
Beethoven Biography and European Politics, 1933-1977
The Modern Era
Exploring Beethoven's Life and Work: Three Sample Years
Reminiscences and Reflections
Bibliography
Index