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Beethoven's Concertos: History, Style, Performance
 
 
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Beethoven's Concertos: History, Style, Performance [Hardcover]

Leon Plantinga (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 1999
Beethoven's piano and violin concertos rank among the most famous and beloved works in concert literature. The composer regared the piano concertos, which he himself premiered, as very personal expressions of his musical thought and perfomance style. This book on Beethoven contains 11 chapters, each of which is devoted to a single concerto and the issues surrounding it. The author includes historical and background information, and details of sources, dating and performance practice, locating the works in their social and musical context, and discussing their form, style and affect, highlighting their expressive individuality. Finally, the author looks at the questions about performing this repertoire today.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Analysis of Beethoven's concertos, at least in the hands of Leon Plantinga, yields insights into almost every aspect of the composer's work. Along with the standard concertos for piano and violin, Plantinga covers the violin romances and the Triple Concerto, sketches for an aborted sixth piano concerto, and the early Rondo WoO 6. There are dozens of helpful musical examples grouped in a separate booklet.

Beethoven originally withheld and revised his piano concertos for his own use and did not perform them after they had been published. But by the time of the Fourth Concerto, Plantinga sees a decided shift to the concerto as a work meant to stand on its own as a symphony does; Beethoven's Fifth Concerto was apparently the very first piano concerto to have been given its premiere by someone other than the composer. In discussing the other works, Plantinga makes an effective comparison of the B-flat Concerto with Haydn's music rather than (as is conventional) with Mozart's. The author's considerable knowledge of Clementi's music is illuminating in relation to the C Major Concerto. Chapters on the C Minor Concerto include a long and careful reconstruction of its compositional history (recapitulated in a short appendix for those who are not musicologically inclined). The tired explanation of the G Major Concerto's slow movement as an Orpheus narrative is effectively dismissed, and Plantinga's dissection of the internal relationships in the slow movement of the "Emperor" is a particularly fine segment of a fine book.

Even readers who are not pianists will find helpful, practical information about when and how a soloist might participate in the orchestral sections of classical concertos, systems of tuning in the period, cadenzas, and historical ideas about tempo. They will also enjoy Plantinga's direct, colorful writing style: the last movement of the "Emperor" behaves "more like a large puppy than a reliable steed." --William R. Braun

From Publishers Weekly

The distinguished veteran Yale music professor Plantinga (Romantic Music) once again earns the gratitude of music lovers with this effort, billed as the first ever full-length book about Beethoven's concertos. Of course, a number of books have been devoted to each of the composer's works, notably in the excellent Cambridge Music Handbook series, but Plantinga's idea to discuss them together is sound, in that Beethoven's concertos, whatever the solo instrument, have more in common with each other than with efforts by other composers. Musically sophisticated laypeople will find Plantinga's prose refreshingly clear and will appreciate his restrained use of musical examples. Plantinga's thoughts retain their human level and tone, no doubt owing to his decades of experience as a teacher. Devoting chapters to the individual works, he also adds valuable notes on performing Beethoven's concertos, debunking some of the "authentic" approaches to early music: "As in the case of Mozart, we have little precise information about just how Beethoven performed his own concertos." This is likely to be a long-valued contribution to the subject.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 384 pages
  • Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company; 1st edition (January 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0393046915
  • ISBN-13: 978-0393046915
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.4 x 1.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,584,908 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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14 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Deep analysis for the non-specialist, September 26, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Beethoven's Concertos: History, Style, Performance (Hardcover)
Leon Plantinga writes clearly and does not clutter his prose with arcane musicological terminology. Yet he presents insights into this music that cannot be obtained elsewhere. A separate booklet, included with the book, presents numerous examples in music type for those who wish to see the precise points in the scores mentioned in the text.
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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Deep analysis, period. Non-specialists beware!, February 24, 2000
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This review is from: Beethoven's Concertos: History, Style, Performance (Hardcover)
The kudos given this work by the above reviewers are well-deserved. Do not be misled, however, into thinking that an affection, or even a passion, for Beethoven guarantees your appreciation of Plantinga's sophisticated analysis. Do not buy this book if you do not have a fairly strong command of music theory and terminology.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Learned Study of Beethoven's Concertos, July 17, 2007
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This review is from: Beethoven's Concertos: History, Style, Performance (Hardcover)
The seven Beethoven concertos, five for piano, one for violin, and one for piano, violin, and cello are among the most familiar works in music. The fourth and fifth piano concertos and the violin concerto were among the works that introduced me to classical music many years ago. I have returned to the concertos many times, most recently in writing a series of reviews on Amazon of the piano concertos. I wanted the benefit of a study to assist my listening and turned to this thoroughly detailed book by Leon Plantinga, "Beethoven's Concertos" History, Style, Performance". (1999) The book taught me a great deal. Plantinga is Professor of Music at Yale University, and he has written extensively on the classical and romantic periods in music history.

Plantinga's book begins with a basic introduction to the concerto form as Beethoven inherited it from his predecessors and developed it in his own compositions. This is followed by two largely biographical chapters which discuss Beethoven's exposure to the concerto while growing to adulthood in Bonn and in his early years in Vienna. Each of the seven concertos is then discussed in detail in lengthy chapters. Plantinga concludes with observations on performance practices in the Beethoven concertos.

The study both treats Beethoven's concertos as a group, showing how Beethoven's treatment of the form changed as he progressed, and also is a guide to each individual work. Plantinga shows how the concerto evolved in Beethoven's hands from works he wrote for his own performance and published only later to musical texts that existed separately from their performance by a particular artist for a specific occasion. Thus, Beethoven performed the piano concertos no. 2 and no.1 many times during his early years in Vienna but published them relatively late, in 1801. Orchestral parts were written out in more detail than the solo part, which Beethoven frequently changed and improvised at the keyboard. In the latter concertos, beginning with the fourth piano concerto, Beethoven began to shift towards publication at the outset rather than to performance and then publication much later.

Plantinga has a great deal to say about the performance of the concertos and about the contemporary interest in "period" sytle performances. I have been listening to several period recordings recently. Plantinga warns only against supposing that period readings are the only or the "authentic" way to perform these glorious concertos. These works, even the latter concertos, include great room for improvisation and different styles. Even the tuning of the instruments did not always follow the equal temprament that is invariably used today. The soloist frequently conducted the early concertos at least from the piano and the soloist also played or was expected to accompany the orchestra during the tutti (ensemble) sections. Period performance, Plantinga suggests, are in fact a type of modernism which tries to expunge romanticism from the playing of Beethoven's concertos. Plantinga himself does not show much sympathy with period readings. While I have grown to enjoy period performances, they are not the only legitimate approach to these inexhaustible works.

I also learned a great deal from Plantinga's treatment of each individual work. For each concerto, Plantinga gives background as to its composition and performance history and detailed musical analyses of each movement. I particularly enjoyed Plantinga's treatment of the origin of the pivotal piano concerto no. 3 in C minor, Opus 37. Plantinga argues that this work was written during the period in which Beethoven wrote his second symphony (1802- 1803) rather than much earlier as is sometimes supposed. In his treatment of the work itself, Plantinga shows the great advances musically that it made over its predecessors. Plantinga is also good in his discussion of the early piano concerto no. 2 and in his detailed treatment of the possible programatic readings of the second movement of the piano concerto no. 4.

The work is full of detailed musical examples, and they are presented in a separate booklet, rather than in the text. The entire slow movement of the fourth piano concerto is included, as are key thematic passages from the other concertos. I found it useful to use the booklet as I listened to the concertos.

Plantinga sees the Beethoven concertos as exemplifying a spirit of heroism, struggle, and high moral purpose that is somewhat out of temper with our skeptical age. It takes an effort of sympathetic understanding to respond to this music. Plantinga writes (p.8) that late 20th Century alienation "threatens our perception of Beethoven's persistent vision of heroic struggle towards human perfection... The real struggle is an internal one, and the triumph exists largely in the moral sphere -- a domain with which art to Beethoven's mind, was always inextricably intertwined." These are inspiring words with which to begin to hear Beethoven for the first or for the hundreth time.

In its depth and musical sophistication, this would not be a good book with which to begin to know the Beethoven concertos. But the book is accessible to lay readers. For those who have lived with the Beethoven concertos and want to revisit them in detail, Plantiga's study is an excellent choice.

Robin Friedman
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In his concertos Beethoven joined in a sort of human expression that seems almost universal: a discourse of the individual and the group, or of leader and followers who sometimes work together in harmony and sometimes appear pitted one against the other (early definitions of the concerto, indeed, were divided as to which was the main idea of the genre-cooperation or conflict). Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Fourth Concerto, Triple Concerto, Third Concerto, Purist Ray Serene, Fifth Concerto, Maximilian Franz, Bureau des Arts, French Revolution, Prince Lobkowitz, Alan Tyson, Choral Fantasy, Fifth Symphony, French Manner, Piano Quartets, Second Symphony, Beethoven Werke, Don Giovanni, Douglas Johnson, Ferdinand Ries, Joseph Kerman, Muzio Clementi, Ninth Symphony, Second Concerto, Vestas Feuer, Arnold Schmitz
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