Beethoven's Eigth Symphony iintroduced by Paavo Järvi

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Seán
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Beethoven's Eigth Symphony iintroduced by Paavo Järvi

Post by Seán »

It’s a puzzle, isn’t it, this symphony? When we think of Beethoven, we always think of music with great depth and profundity. So is it really possible that, after his Seventh Symphony and before his Ninth – those great, epic works – such a genius could write a ‘little Classical symphony’? It looks and sounds like some kind of a joke and that’s exactly what I think it is. It’s the joke of a great genius. It is Beethoven, after all, but you cannot treat it like those other works, because he is taking an unexpected step in an unexpected direction. It is completely wrong to try and play this piece in the style of the Ninth. I have realised that to apologise in any way for the sudden change of character and quirkiness of this piece would diminish it. There are still so-called Beethoven ‘specialists’ who are trying to find profound, inner meaning in this symphony. So far as the tonality of the piece is concerned, it shares a key signature with the Pastoral Symphony, but, if there is any profound connection between the two works, I cannot find it.

In symphonies such as the Seventh and the Ninth, there can be a certain leeway to hide behind certain Romantic and expansive gestures. Not so with the Eighth. This is a wonderful little gem, but you do encounter in it technical and musical challenges. It’s not a piece that works unless everyone is convinced about the common interpretation. The direction must be agreed. You need an orchestra that possesses extreme virtuosity, which is also convinced about a shared approach and interpretation. Otherwise the piece will appear clumsy, out of breath, endlessly speedy – or just messy. It’s a great challenge and, in my relationship with this symphony, I feel my journey is never complete. Along with Schumann’s Symphony No 3, I find this symphony to be one of the hardest pieces in the repertoire to start. I always ask the musicians to be ready to play when I am still backstage, so we can begin the instant I arrive on the podium. It’s a practical thing. It’s essential to capture as much energy as possible in that first phrase.

‘He was deaf, but he was not stupid. He knew how to work a metronome’

If you study Beethoven’s metronome markings, you learn to treat ‘adagio’ in a less literal, more conceptual, context. In fact, the key to this piece as a whole has been to put trust in Beethoven’s metronome markings. He was deaf, but he was not stupid. He knew how to work a metronome. There are so many interesting and important details and it requires remarkable agility to capture the speed, the nuances and the colours. It then follows that you cannot play this piece with a large symphony orchestra. Even with a smaller group it is difficult, which is why I will conduct this work only with orchestras with whom I have an established relationship. It’s not enough for them to ‘meet me halfway’. If the musicians are unwilling – or, more likely, unable – to play it with the necessary dexterity, the piece simply won’t work. They need a chamber music attitude, and that means adequate rehearsal time is essential too. To achieve the necessary lightness and precision, a shift in mentality is needed. If you focus just on beauty and slow the piece down in the style of music of the mid-20th century, you might gain certain, beautiful moments, but you will lose the piece. This is not about making a beautiful sound, but neither is it a matter of achieving cold precision.

I discovered the type of Beethoven in which I am now involved through Sir Roger Norrington, whom I regard as one of the great musical revolutionaries. None of us are in music because we want to change anything. It is simply that a lot of traditions don’t make sense. For me, the interesting and important process is not setting out to convince other people of anything: it is making the piece work for you, yourself. You must build a coherent form. I grew up in a conductor’s family; and my introduction to the symphonies of Beethoven came from recordings by Bruno Walter, Klemperer and Furtwängler. I first heard this music as incredibly Brahmsian, Romantic and beautiful. Performances by the old masters all treat the slower movements in particular with the ears and mind of someone who has already heard Wagner. There was a historic misunderstanding. The kind of slow movement we tend to expect from someone after Wagner simply didn’t exist in Beethoven’s time. If you listen to Bruckner, under the real Bruckner conductors such as Wand, Jochum or Harnoncourt, those slower movements too make more sense when they are not ritualised. When I first played a recording by Roger Norrington, at the beginning I thought there was something wrong with my machine. I was literally speechless. At first this approach seemed to me absolutely wrong, but at the same time exhilarating. Then I learned about ‘Historically Informed Performance’ and I am glad to say, we are very ‘HIP’ now!
"To appreciate the greatness of the Masters is to keep faith in the greatness of humanity." - Wilhelm Furtwängler
fergus
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Re: Beethoven's Eigth Symphony iintroduced by Paavo Järvi

Post by fergus »

I do not own the Jarvi version of this work but I have been able to listen to it on the following YouTube clip….





Jarvi says above: “It’s a puzzle, isn’t it, this symphony?” Perhaps not so much a puzzle but it certainly is different; different from its predecessor the seventh and its successor the ninth. It has no slow movement (Beethoven did sketch one, but he apparently abandoned it). It is also the shortest of his symphonies. There is no long, slow introduction to the work, instead we dive straight into the body of the first movement. So we are dealing with something new and different from Beethoven in this work; nothing new there really.

While working on this symphony Beethoven wrote the famous letter to his “Immortal Beloved” but the sentiments contained in that letter are not reflected in the mood of the Eighth Symphony which is quite a light and cheerful work. Beethoven himself thought highly of the work, apparently considering it better than his Seventh Symphony. Beethoven referred to this work as "my little Symphony in F," in order to distinguish it from his Pastoral Symphony, also in F major.


The symphony opens in a positive and assured way. It has no introduction; he simply states the main theme. Having done that the entire orchestra comes to a complete stop for almost two bars. We are all in suspense; what will happen next? Well, he simply carries on with the second theme after a little prompt from the bassoon. There is a great pulsating sense as the music moves steadily forward. Another interesting touch is that the movement ends with the same music as it started with.


Contemporary audiences of Beethoven who had been ecstatic about the slow, second movement of the Seventh Symphony, must have been perplexed by the second movement of the Eighth Symphony which is neither slow nor long. Commentators at the time suggested that Beethoven composed this movement as a tribute to his friend Johann Maelzel who had invented the chronometer which was an early version of the metronome. Maelzel had also made various hearing aids for Beethoven. The steady rhythmic ticking of the woodwinds certainly lends credibility to the required effect of imitating the metronome.


As the second movement has already sounded like something of a Scherzo we now get, in the third movement, a piece called “Tempo di Menuetto”. To me it sounds more like a rustic folk dance that a courtly, graceful dance; the horns and clarinets in the Trio like section give credence to this for me. Perhaps that is Beethoven’s intention here.

I find the tone of the final movement to be somewhat light hearted and even playful. It also appears to me to be somewhat fragmented; stop start. The quiet beginning suddenly transforms into a loud, boisterous affair. This pattern is repeated in this Rondo form movement; an experiment in orchestral dynamics perhaps and the work winds its way and gradually concludes with a very long and assertive coda.

Beethoven’s Eighth Symphony may, at first glance, seem like an unassuming little work wedged between two colossal symphonies but, as we have seen above, there is a lot more going on here. It is a very clever work, full of surprises and innovations. Yes it is Classically based and very tuneful work whose form seems simple but just below the surface there is a lot to explore and discover. Open your ears and be amazed!
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Seán
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Re: Beethoven's Eigth Symphony iintroduced by Paavo Järvi

Post by Seán »

Good post Fergus, thank you. Strangely enough I NEVER listen to Beethoven's Eighth, I must address that anomaly as I have more than a dozen performances of it in my collection.
"To appreciate the greatness of the Masters is to keep faith in the greatness of humanity." - Wilhelm Furtwängler
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Diapason
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Re: Beethoven's Eigth Symphony iintroduced by Paavo Järvi

Post by Diapason »

Perversely, this is the Beethoven symphony I know best since it was on the Leaving Cert syllabus back in the day. I actually really like it, although I think of it almost as a classical work than a romantic one.
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fergus
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Re: Beethoven's Eigth Symphony iintroduced by Paavo Järvi

Post by fergus »

Seán wrote:Good post Fergus, thank you. Strangely enough I NEVER listen to Beethoven's Eighth, I must address that anomaly as I have more than a dozen performances of it in my collection.
Oh it definitely does deserve further investigation Seán as it is a wonderful work. Why not start with your Abbado version and see how you get on.
To be is to do: Socrates
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