Abstract
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770-1827) was born in Bonn, the capital and
princely residence of the Electorate of Cologne. He gave his first
public piano recital at age seven and at age 14 was employed as organist
at the Elector’s court. In 1792, he moved to Vienna, the capital of
European music at the time, where he studied composition with Joseph
Haydn. Beethoven would spend the rest of his life in Austria, where he
witnessed the conquest of Vienna by the French during the Napoleonic
Wars twice. Beethoven initially made a name for himself as a pianist but
soon gained noble patronage for his compositions as well. Beginning in
1798, his hearing began to deteriorate, and by 1815 he had almost
completely lost his ability to hear. While his hearing loss meant that
he struggled to perform publicly and thus lost a significant part of his
income, he was able to continue composing until his death. His works
marked the transition from the Classical period to the Romantic era in
Western music and remain among the most frequently performed works in
classical music today.
Beethoven’s Symphony No. 3, completed in 1804, is considered the
composition which most clearly marked Beethoven’s transition from the
Classical to the Romantic style. Its first public performance took place
in 1804 at the Vienna residence of Prince Lobkowitz, to whom the
symphony was dedicated. Beethoven’s first biographer claimed that the
composer had originally dedicated this symphony to Napoleon Bonaparte,
whom he admired as the embodiment of the republican, democratic ideals
proclaimed by the French Revolution, and that Beethoven angrily changed
the dedication when Napoleon declared himself emperor. While Beethoven’s
disappointment in Napoleon is documented and the title page of the
original score does show an erasure, it is unlikely that he changed the
dedication since Lobkowitz had paid him for the symphony. Beethoven did
add “written for Bonaparte” to the manuscript’s title page and informed
his publishers that it was titled “Bonaparte,” however. Later editions
of the score referred to it as the “Sinfonia Eroica written for an
unknown hero,” and today it is known as the
Eroica. This excerpt is the opening
movement.