Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827) Diabelli Variations, Op. 120 Variations on God Save the King, WoO 78 Variations on Rule Britannia, WoO 79 Born in Bonn in...
Ludwig van Beethoven
(1770-1827)
Diabelli Variations,
Op. 120
Variations on God Save
the King, WoO 78
Variations on Rule
Britannia, WoO 79
Born in Bonn in 1770, Ludwig van Beethoven was the eldest son of a
singer in the musical establishment of the Archbishop-Elector of Cologne and,
more important, grandson of the Archbishop's former Kapellmeister, whose name
he took. The household was not a happy one. Beethoven's father, described after
his death as a considerable loss to the profits of the wine trade, became
increasingly inadequate both as a singer and as a father and husband, with his
wife always ready to draw invidious comparisons between him and his own father.
Beethoven, however, was trained as a musician, however erratically, and duly
entered the service of the Archbishop, serving as an organist and as a
string-player in the archiepiscopal orchestra. He was already winning some
distinction in Bonn, when, in 1787, he was first sent to Vienna, to study with
Mozart. The illness of his mother forced an early return from this venture and
her subsequent death left him with responsibility for his younger brothers, in
view of his father's domestic and professional failures. In 1792 Beethoven was
sent once more to Vienna, now to study with Haydn, whom he had met in Bonn.
Beethoven's early career in Vienna was helped very considerably by the
circumstances of his move there. The Archbishop was a son of the Empress Maria
Theresa and there were introductions to leading members of society in the
imperial capital. From Haydn he claimed to have learned nothing and his teacher
must have been dismayed at times by his pupil's duplicity, but he went on to
take lessons also from Albrechtsberger, well known for his mastery of
counterpoint, and from the Court Composer Antonio Salieri, and was able to
establish an early position for himself as a pianist of remarkable ability,
coupled with a clear genius in the necessarily related arts of improvisation
and composition.
The onset of deafness at the turn of the century seemed an irony of
Fate. It led Beethoven gradually away from a career as a virtuoso performer and
into an area of composition where he was able to make remarkable changes and
extensions of existing practice. Deafness tended to accentuate his
eccentricities and paranoia, which became extreme as time went on. At the same
time it allowed him to develop an aspect of his music that some critics already
regarded as academic or learned, that of counterpoint, an art in which he had
acquired great mastery. He continued to develop forms inherited from his
predecessors, notably Haydn and Mozart, but expanded these almost to
bursting-point, introducing innovation after innovation as he grew older. To
following generations his music offered a challenge. For some he seemed to have
brought the symphony, in particular, to a final climax, and composers like
Brahms, who drew on earlier tradition, were faced with the daunting task of
continuing on a path that, for some, at least, seemed already to have reached
its height.
Beethoven died in 1827, leaving a body of work that has continued to
provide subsequent generations with an essential heart to their repertoire,
whether in the concertos and symphonies or in the sonatas and chamber music.
The art of variation lies at the heart of a great deal of music.
Extended works may include movements consisting of variations, whether so
titled or not. In improvisation variation is essential, since a performer was,
and is, often obliged to offer variations on a given theme as a demonstration
of this skill. Beethoven's earliest variations date from 1782 when he wrote a
set of variations on a theme by the singer Ernst Christoph Dressier. His Variations
on a Waltz by A. Diabelli offer the final example of this form of
composition, completed in 1823.
The Austrian publisher and composer Anton Diabelli had at first
established himself in Vienna in the second capacity and as a teacher. Work for
the publishers S.A. Steiner & Co. led him, in 1817, to set up in business
as a publisher himself, at first selling his own works and then, in partnership
with Pietro Cappi, issuing a quantity of popular music for which he found an
immediate market. In 1819 he embarked on a project to invite variations from
every well known Austrian composer on a simple waltz melody of his own. The
final result was a collection of some fifty variations, contributed by fifty
composers, including among their number Schubert and the eleven-year-old Liszt,
the whole set capped by a final variation by Czerny, to be published as a
patriotic Vaterlandischer Künstlerverein (Fatherland's Society of
Artists).
Beethoven at first demurred, when invited to contribute a variation to
the collection, but gradually his purpose changed, as he added variation to
variation. By the autumn of 1822 he was writing to Diabelli on the matter of
his own variations, which, it had been agreed, should be issued as a separate
work. For this Beethoven asked a fee of forty ducats, if the work should
develop as he intended. As so often in Beethoven's business dealings, there
were simultaneous negotiations with other publishers and plans, through his
friend Ferdinand Ries, to issue the work in London, with a dedication to Ries's
wife. In the event the set of 33 Variations was published in June
1823 by Diabelli and Cappi, with a dedication to Antonia von Brentano, and the
agreement that Ries had made with the London publishers came to nothing.
Beethoven was able to blame his friend Schindler for everything, in trying to
excuse himself to Ries for the failure of the planned London publication and
its proposed dedication.
The C major waltz provided by Diabelli for the variations is one of
great simplicity, described by Beethoven as Schusterfleck ('Cobbler's
Patching'), a little piece making much use of the device of sequence, the
repetition of a simple figure at different pitches. Beethoven starts his
variations with a march, continues with a syncopated version, followed by an
exhibition of hand-crossing. There is an imitative opening to the fourth
variation, a rhythmically imitative fifth and a more challenging sixth. The
seventh variation offers rhythmic variety with its dotted notes and triplets,
the eighth makes use of a curious repeated figure in the bass against
right-hand chords and the C minor ninth, heavy and resolute, alternates, at
first, left and right hand Left hand octaves, at first descending, are a
feature of the light staccato tenth version of the waltz, with mounting
right-hand chords later ascending over a deep left-hand trill and a final bass
note that reaches the depths of the newly extended keyboard of the time. A
gently imitative Allegretto is followed by an excursion into even more
imaginative territory in the twelfth variation, a Vivace and, the
fourteenth version of the material, a more solemn treatment of it. A Presto
scherzando offers contrast, followed by an Allegro with divided
octaves in the left hand, which has the theme in the seventeenth variation. The
eighteenth offers contrasts of register and there is canonic imitation in the
nineteenth, with a slow Andante 6/4 to follow. The leaping octaves of
the following version of the theme frame a contrasting Meno allegro section,
while the twenty-second is based on Leporello's comic Notte e giorno faticar
('Tired out night and day') from Mozart's Don Giovanni. There is
variety of contrary motion in what follows, leading to a muted four-voice
fughetta. The twenty-fifth variation sets right-hand chords against a busy
left-hand figuration and this is followed by a study in rapid broken triads and
a Vivace that again calls for some agility. The following duple-time
variation gives harmonic variety, leading now to a sombre C minor Adagio. The
same key continues in the thirtieth variation, with its imitative opening and
this is followed by an elaborately ornamented Largo. Next comes a second
fugue, this time a double one, in E flat major, its two subjects presented
together, to end with a brief cadenza. The final metamorphosis is from
waltz to minuet, leading to more rapid figuration as the work comes to an end,
concluding a remarkable achievement, based on the flimsiest of original musical
material, mere Schusterfleck.
The Variations on God Save the King and on Rule Britannia are
less substantial. These were written in 1803 and offered to Breitkopf und
Hartel and, by Ferdinand Ries, to Simrock. They were published the following
year by the Kunst- und Industrie Comptoir. Apparent reference to these
variations is made in a letter written by Beethoven, in French, to an unknown
correspondent, thought to be either Pleyel in Paris or George Thomson in
Edinburgh, publishers with whom he had business. Je vous envoie ci-joint, he
writes, des variations sur 2 thèmes anglais qui sont bien faciles et
qui à ce que j'espère auront un bons succès (I send you herewith some variations
on two English themes that are very easy and which, as I hope, will have good
success). The intention of providing something suitable for the amateur market
is clear. In 1803, the year of Beethoven's Eroica Symphony, there was an
uneasy lull in hostilities between Britain and France, after earlier enforced
Austrian agreement with Napoleon. It was in the following near that the First
Consul had himself crowned Emperor, to Beethoven's dismay. Soon hostilities
were to be resumed with a coalition of countries ranged against the new
Emperor, whose forces were to occupy Vienna.
Beethoven's variations on Thomas Arne's Rule Britannia, from the
latter's masque Alfred of 1740, open with a straightforward statement of
the theme. The first variation, Tempo moderato, is a world away, in its
exploration of wider ranges of the keyboard, leading to a version of gentle
syncopation, against a left-hand accompaniment. The third variation calls for
greater agility in its bravura display, while the fourth makes an obligatory
and dramatic excursion into the minor. The set ends with an Allegro that
restores the melody in clearer form, its headlong course briefly interrupted by
hints of the minor key, before its rapid final section and well defined ending.
The Variations on God Save the King, a work that had impressed
Haydn in London and inspired his own Emperor's Hymn, presents its theme
simply enough and continues with a variation of running notes, followed by
rapider treatments of the material in semiquavers, syncopated and broken up.
The fifth variation moves into an expressive minor key, followed by a brisk
march and a final extended variation that breaks off into an Adagio, before
the display of the concluding Allegro,