Solomon Beethoven 9
Solomon Beethoven 9
Solomon Beethoven 9
1 (Summer, 1986), pp. 3-23 Published by: University of California Press Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/746746 . Accessed: 08/03/2014 09:52
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Beethoven's
A Search
Ninth
Symphony:
for
Order
MAYNARD SOLOMON
We may begin, as Beethoven did, with hovering open fifths, pianissimo, a missing third, a sense of expectancy, soon to be fulfilled by a quickening into life and the forceful emergence of a theme and a definite tonality. The opening of the Ninth Symphony functions, like similar rhetorical gestures in the Seventh Symphony, the "Hammerklavier" Sonata, and several of the late quartets, to raise a curtain so that the action may begin, or so that we may witness the unveiling of a distant universe. More than a gesture is involved. There is a sense in which this passage foreshadows in
19th-Century Music X/1 (Summer 1986). ? by the Regents of the University of California. Presented 16 October 1984 as the third annual Martin Bernstein Lecture, for the Department of Music at New York University. A preliminary version of this paper was given in July 1984 at Harvard University in Lewis Lockwood's seminar on Beethoven's symphpnies.
nuce the whole of the future action, inasmuch as it represents "an initial ambiguity leading to clarification."' At this stage, however, though we know that we have begun, we cannot imagine where Beethoven intends to take us: we do not know what to expect, we do not know how, or even if, the cluster of harmonic, thematic, and rhythmic riddles offered in these measures will be solved. We do not know why this oversized orchestra and massed choruses and soloists are assembled before us. We may even discover that each step toward clarification opens upon a new ambiguity, in a constant interchange of questions and answers. Thus, although we have come to know that the Ninth Symphony is implicit in its opening measures, we cannot predict the Ninth Symphony from them. As the work unfolds, we soon
'Lewis Lockwood, personal communication. 3
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discover that these measures are not merely introductory, but are central to the thematic and tonal trajectoryof the movement, which, however unique its sound, scoring, and dimensions, turns out to be in one of the sonata forms. Learning this, we are not surprised to hear the opening measures again-varied in key, texture, dynamics, and harmonic detail-at the counter statement of the opening at mm. 35-50, or again at the recapitulation, fortissimo (ex. 1). However, those coming to the Ninth Symphony for the first time are wholly unprepared for the reappearance of the hovering fifths in the first section of the finale, which passes in review themes from each of the priormovements beforegetting about its own business. And only a few listeners might sense that in the Adagio Beethoven has rehearsed that reappearanceby an allusion to this passage-just the baresthint of it-by the violins, in the transition leading from the Adagio molto to the second theme, Andante (ex. 2).
Like the critical inspection of themes that opens the finale, this is a reminiscence, a reference backwardwhich engages the memory and compels us to consider present action in the light of past events. After 1815, a variety of such flashbacks becomes almost an obsessional signature technique for Beethoven: in the Sonata, op. 101, a fleeting echo of the opening theme breaks the yearning mood of the Adagio, and in the Sonata, op. 110, the somberly drapedArioso dolente arises unbidden from the depths of the fugue to deliver its message again, before succumbing to the fugue's inexorable affirmation. There are other such retrospective moments in the Ninth Symphony. An aphoristic example, again derived from the opening theme, occurs when the sustained tremolo open fifths give way to the symphony's first melodic gesture-a descending fifth, E to A, on the open strings of the violins. As though to balance the scales, Beethoven opens the recitative of the finale with precisely this same interval, but
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now moving powerfully upward in the low strings from A to E in a decisive change of direction (ex. 3). Along similar lines, commentators have often observed that a descending fourth is central to the opening action of every movement, and a descending fifth concludes the action of each movement, also forming the last notes of the chorus in the Prestissimo of the finale. There is another class of recurrentpatterns in the symphony that consists primarily of forecasts rather than of reminiscences. The simplest and most literal of these occurs in the finale, after the cellos and basses have found the Adagio wanting, whereupon the winds, over a pedal in the horns, play a four-measurepreview of the "Ode to Joy"theme, dolce. And there is a sense in which the Schreckensfanfare ("terror fanfare,"as Wagnerdubbedit) and instrumental recitative that open the finale are to be considered as quite literal harbingers of the second Presto fanfareand vocal recitative. More often, the cross references are sufficiently transformed so that their relationship to what has gone before is fairly oblique. Forexample, the octave swings in the violins and violas, which mark the climax of the crescendo inaugurating the first-movement theme on each of its appearances,reappearfortissimo, heavily syncopated, and now played by the full string section, in the Alla Marcia at the moment which heralds the return of the Ode to Joy theme in its most triumphant form (ex. 4).
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To similar ends, Beethoven may also employ a series of related gestures, such as the highly individual "curtains" that inaugurate not only the first movement but also each of the others. Or he may utilize a sequence of passages drawn from "characteristic styles," whose denotative significance is fairly transparent. Such are the military style fanfares that are woven into-or superimposed upon-each of the movements. In the first movement (mm. 150-58, 419-27) the fanfare figuration is wholly structural-a "cadence theme" seamlessly proclaiming, in turn, the end of the exposition and the recapitulation. The rhythmically disjointed octave figures that announce the scherzo may be regardedas a parodyfanfare2--a musical exemplification of Marx's old saw that history always occurs twice: once as tragedyand again as farce. In the Adagio, the repeated fanfares (mm. 12023, 130-33) are heard almost offstage, vainly striving to breaka mood of deep contemplation; they seem to be an attempt at an arousal,if not a call to action. "Etwas aufgewecktes" ("something awakened") wrote Beethoven on the sketches for the baritonerecitative, upon the recall of the Adagio theme.3 But the fanfare cannot counteract the pull to tragic contemplation (orto dream),and it takes anotherfanfarefinally dissoto accomplish that awakening-the terror fanfare of the frenzied finale, now nantly no longer on a tonic arpeggio,but on the simultaneously sounded tonics of D minor and B6 major. Beethoven was no strangerto the characteristic styles and to their capacities for musical symbolism; titles such as Sinfonia Pastorale, Sinfonia Eroica, Sonate Pathetique, and Quartetto Serioso are only the most obvious confirmation of his habitual utilization of these
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2Inhis classic The Beethoven Quartets (New York, 1966) Joseph Kerman observed the parodistic relationship between the scherzo as a whole and the first movement: the symphony "points its second movement backward, as a sort of epitome to the first" (p. 320). This is not far from Tovey's classicist perspective: "After tragedy comes the satiric drama." (Donald Francis Tovey, Beethoven's Ninth Symphony [London, 19281, p. 24.) Beethoven himself may have authorized this insight in his apparent reference to the scherzo as "nur Possen" ("mere nonsense," "a farce"); see Alexander Wheelock Thayer, Beethovens Leben, ed. Hermann Deiters and Hugo Riemann, vol. V (Leipzig, 1908), p. 29 and fn. 1. 3Nottebohm, Zweite Beethoveniana (Leipzig, 1887), p. 190.
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Example 4 a. Movt. I, mm. 15-16. b. Movt. IV, Alla Marcia,mm. 187-95. styles to suggest denotative ideas.4The most extensive such use in the Ninth Symphony is in the trio of the scherzo, which, as has been frequently observed,5is composed in an idealized pastoral style, one closely akin to that of the opening of the Sixth Symphony (especially mm. 67ff.).A bright, simple eight-measure tune, alla breve, is endlessly repeated over flowing strings, sustained horns, pedal effects, and drones reminiscent of peasant instruments. The refinement of pastoral style for expressive purposes was one of Beethoven's ongoing projects, spanning all of his creative periods. Normally, the style is to be understoodas representing an achieved return to Nature, though there are pastoral movements in Beethoven (I am thinking of the finales of the Violin Sonata in G, op. 96, and the StringQuartet in F, op. 135) where it carries overtones of Romantic irony-the confession that we can never wholly satisfy our metaphysical desires and thus must settle
4For the currency of "the characteristic" in music of Beethoven's time, see F. E. Kirby, "Beethoven's Pastoral terly 56 (1970), 605-23, and "Beethovens Gebrauch von charakteristischen Stilen," Bericht iiber den internationa-
Grita Herre, et al., vol. VIII (Leipzig, 1981), p. 268. SChr6tien Urhan (1838), cited in Jacques-Gabriel Prod'homme, Les Symphonies de Beethoven (Paris, 1906), p. 459; Hermann Kretzschmar, Fiihrer durch den Konzertsaal (Leipzig, 1887), I, 111, Sir George Grove, Beethoven and His Nine Symphonies (London, 1898), p. 359. In Viennese Classical sonata cycles, the trio of the minuet or scherzo is often the locus of nostalgia--whether pastoral or aristocratic, or both at once, as in Mozart's Clarinet Quintet.
for more finite satisfactions, the enjoyments of which are inevitably suffused with a sense of loss. Perhaps the trio of the Ninth Symphony fuses the naive and the ironic, telling of Nature recaptured and lost once again. And this may help to explain why subtle suggestions of pastoral style reverberatein the Adagio at mm. 9294 and 114-18,6 in passages for winds and horns that inspired Mahler to his own explorations of rusticity penetrated by elegiac sadness. Many of these forecasts and reminiscences are fairly close to the surface. They were intended to be so, it seems to me, for Beethoven's aim apparently was to encode such patterns into his symphony so that the reasonablyaware listener could readily decipher them-could at least sense their presence and respond to their implications. Other procedures show greater subtlety, such as the scale gestures in the endings of every movement (exs. 5a-d). Endings of this type seem intended to symbolize transcendence over the intransigent materials that preceded them. Lenz once commented: "Evenhis scales must be victorious!'"7 Well, not always: the Adagio concludes on a rising scale in the winds, to which Beethoven has added a contrapuntal descending scale in the first violins. The scale simultaneously rises and falls: are we being asked to consider scalewise contrarymotion as a symbol of yearningincompletion? Be that as it may, the conspicuous thematic, textural, and harmonic connections
6See Romain Rolland,Beethoven: les grandes 4poques creatrices, edition d6finitive (Paris, 1966), pp. 918-19. 7Wilhelm von Lenz, Beethoven: Eine Kunst-Studie (Hamburg, 1860), IV, 183.
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19TH
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between these passages, to which Lewis Lockwoodhas called my attention, suggest that they are also intended as binding strands in the symphony's pattern of referential moments, "a series of closing events that relate to one another almost as strikingly as do the 'curtains' that open each of the four movements." Lockwood further observes that the upward rushing triplets in the winds in the final measures of the symphony are not a new idea (as Tovey thought) but an explicit referenceto a theme-also in the winds over contrary motion in the stringsthat closes the first large section of the scherzo at mm. 139-43 (ex. 5e). Thus, Beethoven simultaneously refersback to "an ending theme from within the scherzo and to the basic interval (the pentachord of the D mode) ... that in a sense underlies many aspects of the whole work."s II Even without furtherexamples, and with due allowance for the probabilitythat some of these interconnecting details may be fortuitous, or may simply be conventional formulae, I believe that this preliminary survey discloses the presence in the Ninth Symphony of an unprecedentedly complex network of recurrentpatterns and cyclic transformations. Eachof the events in this network may be likened to a discrete musical image or image-cluster within a grand design. Like revenants in a drama,the reminiscences suggest the residue of past events in the present, while the forecastsless literal than the reminiscences, in a process of emergence-foreshadow things to come. In them, the principles of development and variation spill over the fermataand double-barwhich normally fence off one movement of a sonata cycle from the others. Details originating in an earliermovement are projectedonto a later one, and materials which are embryonic, latent with possibilities in their initial incarnations, are brought to completion, undergo reversal, or are superseded at the very moment that their implicit meanings have been revealed. Such connective features in a sonata cycle are often said to strengthen the work's "organic" structure. It is an attractive suggestion. However, such proceduresmay in fact disruptthe orcommunication. 8Personal 8
ganic flow of the materials and their orderlydevelopment. They may well obscure the underlying tonal and harmonic issues, and, to the extent that they are "foreign bodies" in a movement, may compel Beethoven to create mixed forms to accommodate their presence. Ultimately, in seeking to accommodate such disruptive elements within essentially classical designs, Beethoven's structural powers are put to their most extreme test: he succeeds in retaining each of the cross-references both as a functional image and as a part of the formal structure. The references become embedded within the form itself, lending coherence at the same time that they press beyond the merely formal to extra-musical denotation. The precise nature of Beethoven's programmatic intentions will always remain open. Nevertheless, the clear drive toward representation of determinate states in certain of his works is farfromtangential to his creativenature.Forit is apparent that Beethoven-who delighted in calling himself a Tondichter,9a tone-poet, and who regardedpoets as "the leading teachers of the nation"'0--quite consciously wanted us to find "meaning"in the symphony's text, design, and tonal symbols. The encoded network of imagery-the foreshadowings, the reminiscences, the pastoral episodes, the heraldic calls to action, the "terrorfanfare," the review of the themes, the Ode to Joy itself, and each of Schiller's powerful images-are only "moments" in the total design. They do not spell out a literal narrative, but they vibrate with an implied significance that overflows the musical scenario, lending a sense of extramusical narrativity to otherwise untranslatable events. The totality of these resonating signposts suggests the outline of a narrativein minimal form, but nonetheless sufficient to set in motion within each listener a process of imaginative probingfor the potentialities of the entire design.
90n the title-pageof the overtureZur Namensfeier, op. 115, is inscribed:"gedichtet... von Ludwigvan Beethoven";the same designationappearson the title-pageof his "Ausgabe" for Archduke Rudolph, published by Steiner and Co. in 1820. 1961), I, 384 (letter380, 9 August 1812, to Breitkopf& Hirtel).
'oThe Letters of Beethoven, ed. Emily Anderson (London,
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One model of Beethoven's intentionality in the Ninth Symphony was proposed in the late nineteenth century by the literary scholar and Wagner devotee Heinrich von Stein. Perhaps under Wagner'sinfluence, Stein proposed that, in their perfection and sublimity, Beethoven's last symphonies portraythe "Idyllic" state that Schiller had proposed to be the goal of the modern poet." Schiller's was the most influential form of the scenario of alienation and reconciliation that dominated aesthetic and philosophical thought in the post-Enlightenment era. In his essay, "Naive and Sentimental Poetry" (1795-96), of which "The Idyll" is the closing section, Schiller pictured a primal Golden Age, where humanity once dwelt "in a state of pure nature... like a harmonious whole." Ruptured by the onset of civilization, this "sensuous harmony which was in him disappears,and henceforth he can only manifest himself as a moral unity, that is, as aspiringto unity. The harmony that existed as a fact in the formerstate, the harmony of feeling and thought, only exists now in an ideal state."'2 The role of the modern (termed by Schiller the "sentimental") artist, accordingly, is imaginatively to represent the possibility of a renewed harmony to heal the wounds inflicted by mankind's alienation from Nature. This attempt to recapture the idyllic condition that existed "beforethe dawn of civilization" takes a utopian form. We cannot go backward to our biological or historical beginnings, as the pastoral poet desires, for this would place "behind us the end toward which it ought to lead us." In Schiller's famous phrase, the task of the artist, therefore, is to lead us, "who no longer can return to Arcadia, forward to Elysium.1113 Stein's glancing remark entered the Beethoven literature by way of a richly specula-
tive monograph on the Ninth Symphony by Otto Baensch, who, somewhat reluctantly, combined this suggestion with Lenz's earlier one that the first movement outlined a narrative of Creation and the cycle as a whole a "symphonic cosmogony." After noting certain similarities between the scenarios of Haydn's Creation and the Ninth Symphony, Baensch asserted that Beethoven "starts with a portrait of Chaos ... and he crowns the Symphony with the drama of the close of man's history, in the ... Elysian state of civilization."l4 This line of interpretation was accepted by Romain RollandIs and, more recently, has been augmented by HarryGoldschmidt, who takes the pastoralstyle trio of the second movement as an explicit musical metaphor for Arcadia.16The implication is that the Ninth Symphony is intended as a musical analogue of a mythic narrative,a cosmic history, told by an evangelist/narratorrecalling the span of universal experience. Schiller's scenario is, of course, but a special case of other mythic patterns: the spiraljourney from Arcadia to Elysium is also that of Paradise lost and regained, and of all utopian recoveries of a mourned Golden Age. Beethoven's utilization of Schiller's myth-drenched poem potentially activates not only the more universal mythic design to which it belongs but also its numberless correlatives in literature, folklore, theology, and philosophy. Nor is there any reason to suppose that Beethoven intended to limit his narrative to a musical translation of Schiller's parable. The story of the journey from Arcadia to Elysium has, perhaps, already been implicitly merged with another narrative,one that traces the route from Lenz's Creation (or, to remain within Greek mythological terms, from Chaos/Night as the source of all being) to Cataclysm, to the end of history. Forthe symphony does not open in Arcadianinnocence; its first measures sound
""Die letzen Symphonien Beethovens, den Geist erhabenster Heiterkeit ausatmend,stellen in seiner Vollendungdar, was Schiller als Idyll ahnte und forderte."K[arl]Heinrich von Stein, Goethe und Schiller: Beitrige zur Aesthetik der deutschen Klassiker (Leipzig,n. d. [1888?]), p. 69; first published in Monatsschriftdes Allgemeinen Richard-WagnersVerein 10 (May-June 1887). 12The Works of Friedrich Schiller: Aesthetical and Philosophical Essays, ed. Nathan Haskell Dole (New York,1902), II,32. '3Aesthetical and Philosophical Essays, II, 36 (translation amended).
140tto Baensch, Aufbau und Sinn des Chorfinales Beethovens neunter Symphonie (Berlinand Leipzig, 1930), pp. 94-95. '5Rolland,Beethoven: les grandes epoques creatrices, 6dition definitive, p. 931, n. 2. Goldschmidt,Beethoven: Werkeinfuihrungen (Leip16Harry zig, 1975), p. 66; see also pp. 46-48, on the Pastoral Symphony.
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a coming into existence, a stirring, an awakening to life. Furthermore,there is here a twin orbit-an historical one that takes place within the orderof time, and, concurrently, a vertical, spatial route from the underworld (for the Romans tell us that Elysium lies next to Hades),'7 to the Earth(Arcadia'slocation in the Peloponnese), to the starry heavens, and beyond, to the place of the Deity. These concentric myths are so fundamental in their shape that a host of related myths may be subsumed in the scheme. Cosmogonic narrative is an organizing structure, offering models for social existence. It is also an extended metaphor for the individual's road in life, his expulsion, exile, and return to a transfiguredhome. M. H. Abramssees this mythic journey "asa fall from unity into division and into a conflict of contrarieswhich in turn compel the movement back towards a higher integration."'"HarrySlochower stresses that such mythic transcendence is active and ongoing: "the harmony attained carrieswithin itself the earliermoments of dissidence and contains the seeds of a renewed conflict."'9 On a less cosmic scale, the alienation/reconciliation myth has the power to touch the deepest familial and fraternal yearnings, while the Creation myths echo with issues attendant upon birth, ancestry, and death. Among the Romantics, for whom exile was felt to be the primaryhuman condition, it is precisely homesickness (Heimweh) and yearning (Sehnsucht) which keep alive the potential to return. "Wo gehen wir denn hin?" asked Novalis: "Immernach Hause"-always homeward. The distant goal is Blake's "Sweet golden clime / Wherethe traveller'sjourneyis done";and it is Bunyan's high mountainside with its promise
not the underworld, at least "at world's end," for in 1"If Greekmythology, Elysium is located in a far-distantregion of the earth's surface (Homer,Hesiod). See "Elysium,"Oxford Companion to Classical Literature;and Pauly's RealEncyclopiidieder Classischen Altertumswissenschaft, vol. V, cols. 2470-76. Baensch emphasizes certain metaphoric aspects of Elysium, as "a moral state of perfect community," the (heavenly)realm of freedom, morality, and true religion (Baensch,pp. 29, 51-52). '8Abrams,Natural Supernaturalism:Tradition and Revolution in Romantic Literature (New York and London, 1971), p. 193. See also Northrop Frye, Anatomy of Criticism: FourEssays (Princeton,1957),p. 161. '9HarrySlochower, Mythopoesis: Mythic Patterns in the LiteraryClassics (Detroit, 1970),p. 23. 10
of refreshment in "the pleasant beams of the sun." Here, it is Schiller's and Beethoven's Elysium, where brothersfind release from struggle as well as the protection of a benevolent Deity and the nourishment of an eternally young Goddess of Joy. Beneath the literary, mythic, and psychological levels, the symphony's shape mirrorsthe orderedshapes of nature itself: the turning of the seasons, the ceaseless interchange between life and death, the movement of the heavenly spheres,the rhythms of biological existence and natural phenomena.20And this reminds us of the difficulties of trying to endow music with denotative meaning. To give only one example: it is surely plausible for the Romantic commentators to claim that Beethoven's opening measures suggest chaos striving for lucid formation and therefore may be taken as an image of universal origins, particularly so in view of the symphony's frankly apocalyptic telos. But all that we can really say is that the opening expresses a sense of emergence or of crystallization, which, though it may be taken to represent Creation, can also symbolize birth, the transition from darkness into light, of awakening from dream, the occurrence of a thought. The nebula of possibilities precludes any attempt at delimitation. The scenario of the Ninth Symphony is a nuclear design, standing for an infinity of related designs. But this merely confirms once againthe inexhaustibility of the symbol: the Ninth Symphony is a symbol the totality of whose referents cannot be known and whose full effects will never be experienced. And there is no need to mourn the loss, for, as Eco explains, to decode a symbol is to render it mute.21 In uncovering the mythic substratum of Beethoven's Ninth
20Theseoverdeterminingsubstructuresor matrices of aesthetic form are discussed by such aestheticians as Langer, Dewey, Arnheim, and the psychoanalytic writers who derive from Melanie Klein. See Susanne Langer,Feeling and Form(New York, 1953),pp. 240-42; JohnDewey, Art as Experience (New York, 1934),pp. 147-50; RudolphArnheim, Art and VisualPerception(Berkeleyand LosAngeles, 1969), p. 376; The Critical Writingsof Adrian Stokes, ed. Lawrence Gowing (London,1978),II, 160-63 and III,150-51. 21"The symbol has no authorizedinterpretant.The symbol says that there is something that it could say, but this something cannot be definitely spelled out once andforall; otherwise the symbol would stop saying it." Umberto Eco,Semiotics and the Philosophy of Language(Bloomington,1984), p. 161.
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Symphony we uncover a fragment of his intentionality; in refusing to accept the mythic design as the ultimate or sole meaning of the symphony we remain true to the nature of music, whose meanings are beyond translation-and beyond intentionality. "The composer reveals the inner nature of the world," wrote Schopenhauer, "and expresses the deepest wisdom in a language which his reason does not understand.''22 Nevertheless, intentionality cannot be wholly annihilated. And so we return, for what it may be worth, to one aspect of Beethoven's apparentintentions to try to learn more about how his symbol found its form. III Woven into the Ninth Symphony's system of forecasts and reminiscences are several overarching patterns to which Beethoven has given the shape of quests. As we have seen, the symphony as a whole is to be regarded as an extended metaphor of a quest for Elysium. The geography of this odyssey is retrospectively mappedby the review and rejection of the opening themes of the earlier movements; the contours of Elysium are describedin Schiller's text, and the arrival is heralded by the Ode to Joy theme. However, that joyous unveiling may itself be viewed as the climax of another teleological pattern, which we may term a thematic quest-a succession of themes and thematic fragments which by their prefiguration of the Ode to Joy melody suggest that it was intended to be the culmination of a series of melodies aspiring to achieve an ultimate, lapidaryform. This notion seems to have originated with RichardWagnerin 1851, when he observedthat the Ode to Joy melody was complete in Beethoven's mind "from the beginning"; Beethoven, he maintained, "shatteredit into its component parts" at the outset and only in the course of the symphony did he finally "set his full melody before us as a finished whole."23
Wagner's Russian disciple, Alexander Serov, was the first seriously to elaborate on this procedure, which he described as the "transformation of a single idea through a 'chain of metaThe Worldas Will and Idea, vol. I (Garden 22Schopenhauer, City, N. Y., 1961),p. 271. 2Wagner, Opera and Drama, in Prose Works, trans. W. Ashton Ellis, vol. II(London,1893),pp. 109-10.
morphoses,' without departing from the main image" of the theme. He held that the symphony is a series of moments within a "great monothematic plan" by which Beethoven unfolds the Ode to Joyas a symbol of Elysium. "In both the opening Allegro and the scherzo, there are not only flashes of major taken verbatim from the theme of the [Ode to Joy],but even the developments in the minor are built on it."24 Of course, reliance on this sort of tune-detection can be fairly risky, for it is not difficult to discover what one wishes to find, especially with a melody constructed of such commonplace elements. But it seemed clear enough to Wagnerand Serovfrom the pervasiveness of the pattern that it was an intentional design. If they are correct, each of the precursorsof the Ode to Joytheme is a separate idea ratherthan a literal anticipation. They are linked together by the similarity of their melodic shapes, which move upward and downward in stepwise patterns. Most of them begin on a degree of the scale different from the "Joy" theme, and all present rhythmic variants of the ascending and descending progressions(ex. 6). These may be seen as forecasts of the Ode to Joyin a state of becoming, as melody yearning for a condition that has yet to be defined. However, what Serov had in mind was no doubt even more literal: the rhythmically-disguised presence, in the introduction to the second subject at mm. 76-77, of the actual sequence of notes that make up the opening bars of the theme. The scherzo is burstingwith fragments of the Ode to Joy melody (ex. 7). But it is the trio that contains the most fulfilled of these "premature variants" of the theme. Here the thematic journey finds a momentary resting place in a glowing Arcadian moment within which may be glimpsed the sublimated kernel of the "Joy" theme (ex. 8). In contrast to this tonic-centered
24Serov, "Deviataia simfoniia Bethkhovena. Eio sklad i
smysl," Izbrannye stat'i, I (Moscow and Leningrad,1950), pp. 429, 433. I am gratefulto RichardTaruskinfor the translation. Although never translated,Serov'sideas became influential through Lenz, Beethoven: Eine Kunst-Studie,IV, 177- 78, andthence throughGroveandothers. See also Karl Steinfried, "Das Freudemotifals Grundmotifder Neunten Der Klavierlehrer),25 (1892), 321-33; Rudolph R6ti, The Thematic Process in Music (New York, 1951), esp. pp. 2230; Fritz Cassirer, Beethoven und die Gestalt (Berlinand Leipzig, 1925),pp. 161- 74. 11
Sinfonie ... ," Musik-Piidagogische Zeitschrift (formerly
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folklike tune, several of these thematic materials embody the common configuration of so many of Beethoven's "Sehnsucht" melodiesan upward striving that is ultimately defeated and returns to a point of unrest or disequilibrium. The Adagio's themes are especially contoured in this "yearning" pattern (ex. 9). The second phrase of the opening theme at m. 10 contains in the strings a subtle forecast of the characteristic turning figure of the "Joy"melody, followed by an upward chromatic movement through a CO,almost as though reaching out for D major.Later,duringa free variation on
12
the Adagio theme in the Coda,occurs an almost literal statement of the opening strain of the Ode to Joy (ex. 10). A counterpoint to the main melody is heard in the flutes and oboes, in Bb major, with altered rhythmic values but virtually unchanged melodic line, like a somnambulistic previsioning of the theme. We now know that Wagnerwas correctin his surmise that the melody of the Ode to Joy was fully formed by the time that Beethoven worked on the earlier movements, for Robert Winter have shown that the and SieghardBrandenburg Artaria 201 sketchbook, which contains the
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melody and presents a layout of the symphony essentially correspondingto its final shape, was written as early as October 1822.25 That Beethoven intended to suggest a process of thematic quest and discovery also seems to find confirmation in his sketches for the finale's vocal recitative. Rejecting the Adagio theme, he writes: "Also not this; it is too tender; we must seek something more animated."26And upon the arrival of the "Joy" theme he writes: "Dieses ist es. Ha, es ist nun gefunden" ("This is it. Ha! It is now discovered"),27 words which
25See RobertWinter, "The Sketches for the 'Odeto Joy',"in Beethoven, Performers,and Critics, ed. RobertWinter and Bruce Carr (Detroit, 1980), p. 180; SieghardBrandenburg, "Die Skizzen zur Neunten Symphonie,"Zu Beethoven, ed. HarryGoldschmidt, vol. II (Leipzig,1984),pp. 106-09. 26Nottebohm,Zweite Beethoveniana, pp. 190-91. "Auch dieses es ist zu zirtl. etwas aufgewecktesmuss man suchen
...'
(italics added).
would have been equally appropriateto the discovery of any sacred object of a quest-romance. It follows that these themes and melodic fragments are to be regardedas subliminal foreshadowings or anticipatory variations of the Ode to Joy,with at least one veiled but virtually literal version of the melody encoded into each of the first three movements. Each stage except the last is unfulfilled, thus impelling the symphony toward its eventual consummation in a melody characterized by legato movement, stepwise motion, the avoidance of chromaticism or dissonance, and, above all, by a smooth, gratifying, and predictable orbit around the tonic center, which is touched upon ten times in the course of its first sixteen measures. Inevitably, the internal dynamic of Beethoven's procedure is not exhausted by a view that regards each theme merely as a step toward discovery of the Ode to Joy. For just as each fragment is an auguryof that melody, it is equally a referent of the other themes in the sequence, both retrospectively and prospectively. The introduction to the second subject of the first movement forecasts the trio of the scherzo as well as the Ode to Joy.The trio supersedespathetic striving and is in turn superseded by the Adagio's inwardness, with its own momentary backward glances to the pastoral style. Nor are the earlier moments in Beethoven's thematic quest forgotten in the choral jubila13
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tion. In the Alla Marcia,as a preparationfor the climactic fortissimo return of the chorus on the words "Freudesch6ner G6tterfunken,"is a passage containing three fragments of the Ode to Joytheme (mm. 199-212). The first, a sequence of three notes, Dt -E-F#, a clearreferenceto the theme, rises to the dominant of B major. But Beethoven then modulates to the minor, presenting a second rising sequence D-E-F#, which sounds the same notes as the opening of the scherzo'spastoral-styletrio. The effect is of a distant recall of the Arcadianmoment, but now darkly colored by the B-minor tonality to suggest that this major-key experience can no longer be regained, at least not in its original form. The third sequence repeats the first, but with an urgency of signification and sense of irresistible momentum owing to its having now emergedfrom its descent to the minor as well as from the memory of an unrecapturable innocence. The Ninth Symphony's thematic quest does not end with the finding of the Ode to Joy. Thereafterthe melody becomes the point of departurefor an immense number of transformations, implying that even this theme is not an ultimate place of simple tranquility. In its initial incarnation, the theme is pitched at human scale; but with each succeeding variation it begins its separation from the earthly and in the later variations cuts loose altogether from its human moorings to engage other, indefinable levels of experience. The march variation is to be seen as only the first way-station on a journey into exoticism that reaches a climax in the ecstatic medievalism of the Andante maestoso, where, at the words, "Seid umschlungen Millionen," a new melody in an archaic style makes its appearance, sharply disrupting the melodic and tonal patterns of the movement. But in the subsequent Allegro energico the "new" melody turns out to have been an implicit component of, indeed a counter melody to, the Ode to Joy, as though to illuminate the
exotic underside of Beethoven's Humanititsmelodie. IV The Ninth Symphony is usually said to represent the victory of D major over D minor. In Leo Treitler's trenchant recent formulation, there is the "sense of a drive to move out of the one and
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into the other" which constitutes this "one of the main narrative lines of the work as a whole."28 Looked at from a slightly different standpoint, we might say that the symphony's tonal trajectoryencompasses a quest for D major, wherein almost every allusion to potential transcendence appears to be inscribed in that key; or, to invert the thought, every allusion to D majorcompels us to consider it as a symbol of potential transcendence. In the scenario, each D-major passage seems to imply a momentary arrival point-but no permanent haven-in the ongoing journey toward the D-major "Joy" theme. The issue had been raised in the opening measures of the symphony with the catastrophic plunge into D minor, an event that, accordingto Beethoven, in a sketchbook note, "reThis event might be minds us of our despair."29 nullified only by a full transformationinto the tonic major; and such a transformation occurs at the onset of the recapitulation, where the introduction returns fortissimo on what appears to be a D-major chord, with the F# in the bass instruments (see ex. 1).There is, of course, more than one way to interpret a chord, and, notoriously in Beethoven, things are often not what they appear to be at first glance. Schenker showed that the chord may be read as an inversion of the dominant of G minor.30The effect is to offer an apparentD-major moment which is ironically subverted by its G-minor implication. In any event, the F#is insufficient to offset the negative inner core of this theme, which soon yields to D minor and then moves on to Bb, another of the symphony's tonal centers.31 Two further D-major passages in the recapitulation are filled with pathos but have little chance of prevailing against more powerful, less fragmented forces. It is only in the coda that a D-major passage
28Leo Treitler, "To WorshipThat Celestial Sound,"Journal of Musicology 1 (1982), 165. See also ErnestSanders,"Form and Content in the Finale of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony,"Musical Quarterly50 (1964),60. 29Nottebohm,Zweite Beethoveniana, p. 189. 30Heinrich Schenker,Beethovens Neunte Sinfonie (Vienna and Leipzig, 1912),pp. 96-97. 31The significance of Bb major is fruitfully analyzed by Sanders,pp. 60-69. Earlier,Vincent d'Indystressedthat the chord of B6 is one of "the two tonal bases of the work" (Beethoven:A Critical Biography [Boston, 1911], p. 114). See also Reti, Thematic Process,pp. 24ff.
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proves capable of withstanding the pull to the minor long enough to serve as an image of possible transcendence. The strings suddenly form a soft tapestry against which the horns in D, in full major tonic, develop the utopian implications of the second phrase of the first theme. One by one the winds add their commentary in a rising pattern of sighing phrases, thus to affirm the superlative characterof the moment, which endures for a brief eight measures until, at last, it slips back into the tonic minor (ex. 11). Like the first harbingers of the Ode to Joy melody, the early D-major episodes of the symphony may be held to represent a striving toward an as-yet-undefined condition. And this is true of the swift glimpse of D majorin the scherzo's recapitulation of the second subject (mm. 330-38), a blazing eight-measure segment that reverts to the minor mode almost before one can grasp its implications. It is only in the trio that we at last discover a defined state, that of the Arcadian/Edenic, symbolized, we have seen, by pastoral-style, tonic-centered melody, and, of course, by the key of D majoras well. Indeed this is the first extended, self-enclosed section of the symphony with a D-majorsignature. With the return of the scherzo, the earthly paradiseis again lost, along with its characteristic tonality. In the Adagio, as we noted earlier, this Arcadian experience is briefly recalled several times as an unrecoverable wisp of memory emerging from the depths of inwardness. However, the slow movement has its own window on Eden-the second theme, Andante, in D major,with an elegiac aching for the tonic, which it finally touches only to fall away of its own weight to the F# with which it began (ex. 12). Kermanhears the Andante as "an echo of the Dmajorhorn theme in the coda of the first movement"32-as another strand in the web of interrelationships which Beethoven has designed. The finale reaches D major eagerly, but hesitantly, with the first intimation of the Ode to Joy at mm. 77-80; but even the confident Dmajor arrival of the full theme itself is a consummation too much desired to be so easily achieved or permanently retained. A second exposition, with chorus, is required for that purpose. And even so, the tonic major will have to undergo numerous vicissitudes before its su32Personal communication.
premacy is at last granted in the prestissimo closing measures of the symphony. This is an unsurpassable affirmation of the tonic, apparently aiming to suppress all further doubts and uncertainties, and to bring the tonal quest to a resounding close. One might speculate that by omitting the third and fifth degrees of the scale in the crashing octaves of the final chordBeethoven intends to offer a new tonal ambiguity, perhapsthereby to suggest that D minor has not been altogether exorcised. More likely, the closing unison is intended to override all contradictions between major and minor by reaching the substratum of the underlying D mode. For Beethoven, such a unison on the tonic offers the most extreme possible simplification of the issues, the irrefutable reply to--and completion of-the hovering fifths with which he began. Beethoven's ultimate destination thus contains a reminescence, by way of maximum contrast, of the opening pianissimo gesture of the Allegro ma non troppo.And in a spectacular stroke, the final fortissimo measures revert to the triplet figure with which the symphony began, suddenly revealing this rhythmic pattern to have been one of the motivating forces of the entire work. By these means, and by its allusions to prior scale passages, descending and ascending fifths and octaves, the closing measures of the symphony spiral back, in an instant of dizzying simultaneous recollection, to the chorus's final "Freudesch6ner G6tterfunken,"to the opening notes of the cello/baritone recitative, to the closing measures of each movement, to the triplet passages of the scherzo, Adagio, and Alla Marcia, to the original D-minor theme, and even to the initial movement of equivocality. The effect is of a temporal compression so extreme that it appears as a drive, not merely for unity-"Alle Menschen werden Briider"-but for unbounded fusion-"Diesen KuBf der ganzen Welt!"
V To summarize: a multiplicity of drives converges in the Ninth Symphony's finale-for a visionary D major to overcome the power of D minor; for a theme adequate to represent "Joy, divine spark of the Gods"; for Elysium, with its promise of brotherhood, reconciliation, and eternal life; for a recovery of the Classical ideal
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of humanity united with Nature. And more: for a Deity who transcends any particularizations of religious creed; for a fusion of Christian and Paganbeliefs, a marriageof Faust and Helen. All of this resonates in the stanzas Beethoven selected from Schiller's poem. And, as I have proposed elsewhere,33 the Ninth Symphony may also be taken as an emblem of the idealism of Beethoven's youth, when he was enflamed by what he called the "fever of the Revolution" This by virtue of its Clas(Revolutionsfieber).34 its renovation of a heroic style steeped sicism, in the celebratoryfestivals of the French Revolution, and by virtue of its doubling back to Schiller's politically radical, quasi-Masonic
Beethoven (New York, 1977),pp. 309-10. 33Solomon, 34Anderson, Letters of Beethoven I, 73 (letter 57, 8 April 1802, to Hoffmeister). 16
text of the mid-1780s. In an era of reaction, it represents homesickness for the Aufkliirung as an historical model of a Golden Age. The Ode to Joy revives the naive dream of benevolent (and, equally important to Beethoven, aesthetically enlightened) kings and princes, presiding over a harmony of national and class interests duringa moment of sharedbeliefs in progress,fraternity, and social justice. From this point of view, the Ninth Symphony is Beethoven's A la recherche du temps perdu-that, at least, is one way of readinghis backward glances to Schiller, to France, to the Enlightenment, and to Classicism; one way to explain his revival of a project dating back to 1792; and one way to understand why he fashioned the "Joy"theme out of a dance-like pastoral tune that he had already used three times, the first as early as 1794. An Elysium still to
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come is modeled on a legendary dream-history out of the accumulated desires of a composer's lifetime. I stress Beethoven's futuristic orientation in the Ninth Symphony. Whatever his yearning for the past, he does not seek pure restoration. His purposeis to create a cosmos that had never before existed; he wants to discover his own Ninth Symphony. His unprecedentedly complex use of text, scenarios, programmaticindications, characteristic styles, musical symbolism, and the web of forecasts, reminiscences, and other denotational devices is the hallmark of a profoundly modernist perspective. To come to this point quickly: in some of his most "Beethovenian" sonata-style instrumental works, a range of novel, extreme states of being were heard expressed for the first time in music--states that had previously been approximated, if at all, only in certain discursive forms of dramatic vocal music. We encounter a wide spectrum of such extreme states in the Ninth Symphony, among them those touching upon such issues as creation, aggression, immensity, the ecstatic, the celestial, or, if one were to attempt to find one term to encompass these, the ultranormal.It is not that priorcomposers of instrumental music had lacked depth of passion or that they had failed to write music of the deepest emotional substance. But Beethoven strove to represent states of being that essentially were regardedas off limits by his predecessors. For example, writing to his father in 1781, Mozart expressed this typical attitude as a matter of course, in a tone very like that of Hamlet in his instructions to the players:
Passions, whether violent or not, must never be expressed to the point of exciting disgust, and music, even in the most terrible situations, must never offend the ear, but must please the listener, or in other words must never cease to be music.35 And this is in conformity with the functions of music in the salons, theaters, churches, and courts of Europe-to instruct, to give pleasure, to reinforce faith, to arouse the passions only to soothe them, to probe but not to disrupt.
Beethoven's music sought to disrupt. This new quality was first understood, or at least articulated, by Hoffmann, in his famous 1810 review of the Fifth Symphony in the Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung. "Beethoven's music opens the floodgates of fear, of terror,of horror, of pain, and arouses that yearning for the infinite which is the essence of Romanticism," wrote Hoffmann.36And while he claimed that Beethoven's music represents the immeasurable, he did so within a frameworkthat we, too, may find workable, for he went on to demonstrate the connectedness of Beethoven's symphonic form. Taking cognizance of the widespreadcontemporaryallegations of Beethoven's immoderation, bizarrerie,and infringements of the Classical models, he nonetheless insisted that Beethoven "can be placed directly alongside Haydn and Mozart with regardto his selfpossession [Besonnenheit]." By this idiosyncratic term, which he adaptedfrom JeanPaul's School for Aesthetics,37Hoffmann signified the composure, serenity, and reflectiveness that are the qualities of an achieved Classicism. In his earlier years, Beethoven had invented (or adapted from other composers) numerous propulsive techniques with which to represent energy in motion and relentless striving. Concurrently,he devised a syntax that aimed to create, postpone, modulate, and fulfil cathartic expectations by a variety of innovative formal procedures.We may want to designate this dynamic vocabularyand syntax of the middle-period sonata cycles as a "heroic" characteristic style, one which served as such for subsequent nineteenth-century music. Overlapping with the development of this style, and culminating
36Allgemeinemusikalische Zeitung, vol. 12 (1810); trans. RonaldTaylor, in The Romantic Periodin Germany,ed. S. Prawer(London,1970),p. 287. 37Horn of Oberon:Jean Paul Richter's School for AesthetR. Hale (Detroit, 1973),pp. 36-38, ?12. ics, trans. Margaret "Reflectiveness,"writes JeanPaul, "implies at every level a balance and a tension between activity and passivity, between subject and object.... Inspirationproducesonly the whole; calmness produces the parts." For Hoffman's concept of "Besonnenheit,"see RonaldTaylor,Hoffmann(New York, 1963), pp. 33-37; Hans Heinrich Eggebrecht, "Beethovenund derBegriffderKlassik,"in Beethoven-Symposion Wien1970: Bericht, ed. ErichSchenk (Vienna,1971), pp. 54-56; anda variety of referencesby CarlDahlhaus, including, "E.T. A. Hoffmanns Beethoven-Kritik und die Aesthetik des Erhabenen,"Archiv ffir Musikwissenschaft 38 (1981),79-92.
35TheLetters of Mozart and His Family, ed. Emily Anderson, 2nd edn. (Londonand New York, 1966), II, 769 (letter 426, 26 September1781).
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in the last works, is the emergence of several other characteristic styles, intended to represent a range of transcendent states, states attainable, it seems, only through the compounding of unceasing striving by eternal longing. The Romantic idea of such restless longing is, of course, central to Beethoven's aesthetic. He wrote to Christine Gerhardias early as 1797 about the need "to strive toward the inaccessible goal which art and nature have set us" and to Wegeler in 1801 that "every day brings me nearer to the goal which I feel but cannot describe";and, to a young admirerin 1812, he confessed that the artist "sees unfortunately that art has no boundaries; he feels dimly how remote he is from his goal."38For Beethoven, as for his contemporaries,the drive for personalrealization was the subjective aspect of a transcendental longing as well. Such longing, wrote Fichte in 1794, is "the impulse toward something entirely unknown that reveals itself only in a sense of need, in a feeling of dissatisfaction or emptiness."39To revert to Schiller's frameNatwork (but now in Nietzsche's paraphrase), ure and the Idealhave become "objectsof grief," in which the "formeris felt to be lost, and the latter to be beyond reach." Fortunately, however, "both may become objects of joy when they are represented as actual."40The Ninth Symphony'srepresentationof this griefand this joy is sculpted out of unprecedented materials sufficient to portray, if not to solve, this dilemma. To create a vocabulary that represents extremes of despairand bliss, and their gradations, became Beethoven's project in the Ninth Symphony and other works of his final decade. (In his hubris, he would not accept that, strictly speaking, neither the invisible nor the infinite can be represented.41) For this undertaking he
The Letters of Beethoven I, 29 (letter 23); I, 68 38Anderson, (letter 54, 16 November 1801); I, 381 (letter 376, 17 July 1812, to Emilie M.). 39Fichte, Grundlage der gesamten Wissenschaftslehre (1794), p. 303, cited in Oskar Walzel, German Romanticism, 5th edn. (New York, 1965),p. 29. 4?Nietzsche, The Birth of Tragedy,trans. Francis Golffing (GardenCity, N. Y., 1956),p. 116. 41A. W. Schlegel ponderedthis issue, and concluded: "The impressions of the senses are to be hallowed, as it were, by a mysterious connexion with higherfeelings; andthe soul, on the other hand, embodies its forebodingsor indescribable intuition of infinity, in types and symbols borrowedfrom 18
developed a very wide variety of procedures,including harmonic and rhythmic motion slowed to the edge of motionlessness, clouded harmonic progressions, passages in indeterminate keys, nebulous and nocturnal effects, multivalent tonal trajectories, enormously extended time spans, several highly idiosyncratic fugue styles, and a supremely ornamented variation style that implies the infinite possibilities latent even in the simplest musical materials.42 Sometimes, though he was wont to disavow the practice in theory, he used a more literal kind of symbolism.43 On a leaf of sketches to "Ueber Sternen muss er wohnen," he wrote, "The height of the stars [canbe pictured]more by way In Calm Sea and Prosperof the instruments."44 ous Voyage,op. 112, the words "Tiefe Stille" are represented by a long, sustained pianissimo chord, and the words "der ungeheurn Weite" (immense distance) are describedby an upward leap of an octave and a fourth in the sopranoand a downward plunge of an octave in the bass. Other representations of the boundless are the astonishing consecutive repetition of a single high A twenty-seven times in the Arioso dolente of op. 110 and the use of patently circular shapes-symbols of infinity-in the Allegretto of the Seventh Symphony and the song cycle An die ferne Geliebte. Beethoven's modernist contribution, then, was to symbolize extreme states by means of a host of new musical images and image clusters
the visible world." Ueber dramatischeKunstund Literatur, 2nd edn. (Heidelberg,1817), trans. JohnBlack and A. J.W. Morrison,A Courseof Lectureson Dramatic Art and Literature (London,1846),pp. 26-27. 42Kerman considers the Adagioof the Quartetop. 59, no. 2, as Beethoven'sattempt to representthe infinite: "Timelessness for Beethoven meant motionlessness" (TheBeethoven Quartets, p. 128); Nicholas Temperley proposes that Beethoven'sframingof the Seventh Symphony'sAllegretto with a 6 tonic chordis a way of "expressingin music the infinite nostalgia of the Romantics, forever unassuaged" andBeethoven'sEight-SixChord,"this journal5 ("Schubert [19811,152). 43"Mehr Ausdruck der Empfindung,als Malerey," he insisted on the title-page of the Pastoral Symphony, even as the work itself indulgedin severalnotorious touches of naturalistic imitation. It has been suggested that Beethoven hoped to avoid the criticism of such imitative practices which had been heaped upon Haydn for his oratorios. See Adolf Sandberger,Ausgewiihlte Aufsiitze zur Musikgeschichte, vol. II (Munich, 1924),pp. 211-12. Zweite Beethoveniana,p. 186;LudwigNohl, 44Nottebohm, Beethovens Leben, vol. III(Leipzig,1877),p. 395.
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that we may collectively designate as authentic characteristic styles, prototypical styles which have yet to be named, let alone fully analyzed. This disruptive new content forced a reshaping of sonata structure in the direction of extreme organicist integration of highly dissociative materials. To the other Ninth Symphony quests, therefore, can be added a quest for style and a quest for form. And at the root of the symphony's many questing patterns is a single impulse-to discover a principle of order in the face of chaotic and hostile energy. Of course, all art seeks simplification of the perplexities of experience: "Really, universally, relations stop nowhere," observed Henry James, "and the exquisite problem of the artist is eternally but to draw, by a geometry of his own, the circle, within which they shall happily appearto do so."45In Poulet's words, the work of art "creates a cloister in whose shelter reality can be isolated, contemplated and represented, without running the risk of melting into the universal multiplicity of phenomena."46There is this difference, however: Beethoven limits chaos not by avoiding but by picturing it, thereby circumscribing its jurisdiction. ("We gain power over worldly things by naming to which Casthem," writes Wackenroder;47 sirer adds, "knowledge of the name gives him who knows it mastery even over the being and will of the God."48) Beethoven's is a risky Classicism, which introduces the original and the bizarre (i.e., the modern)in the service of a higher conception of the Classic, one that does not remain content to imitate a preexistent model of harmony. He casts suspicion on all such models, with their implications of complacency. He rejects everything that can readily be completed, for he seeks
the Unendliche-the unending.49Disruption, disorientation, and dissociation are essential to his project; the late works alter, or dispense with, easy conceptions of order,symmetry, and decorum. Ultimately, of course, his new forms may be even more coherent than those of his predecessors,but their coherence bearsthe deep impress of a journey through the reaches of chaos. In some sense, Beethoven's aesthetic exempifies the early Romantic dual program:to shatter the apparentorderof experience and to transcend chaos through form. Novalis urged that "in every poem chaos must shimmer through the regular veil of orderliness";50 Friedrich Schlegel insisted that "understanding and caprice must be chaoticized in poetry."5' Their aim, of course, was, by a process of estrangement, to reach an underlying reality; in Shelley's words, "poetry lifts the veil from the hidden beauty of the world, and makes familiar objects appear as if they were not familiar."52 Thereby they wished also to repudiate the dilute rationality of the post-Enlightenment, to enlarge the claims of intuition and of the productive imagination. Schubert became quite emotional about this issue in a diary entry of 1824: inexhaustMan'sgreatesttreasure, O imagination! come to ible sourceat which bothArtandLearning drink!O remainwith us ... so thatwe maybe safethathideous fromso-calledEnlightenment, guarded skeletonwithoutbloodorflesh.53 Unlike the main exponents of German literary Romanticism, whose works so often splintered into oracular aphorism or into truncated
49I
45James, prefaceto RoderickHudson, TheNovels and Tales of HenryJames:New YorkEdition, vol. I (New York, 1907), p. viii. Poulet, The Metamorphoses of the Circle (Balti46Georges more, 1966),p. 309. and LudwigTieck, Out47Wilhelm Heinrich Wackenroder pourings of an Art-LovingFriar(1796; New York, 1975),p. 59. 48Ernst Cassirer,Languageand Myth (New York, 1946), p. 48. Cassirerinforms us that the Babylonian-Assyrian "myth of creation describes Chaos as the condition of the world when the heavens above were 'unnamed' and on earth no name was known for any thing" (p. 82).
here follow Bakhtin's exposition of the "RomanticGrotesque," without, however, placing Beethoven's Ninth Symphonyin that category. See Mikhail Bakhtin, Rabelais and His World(Cambridge, Mass., 1968),pp. 36-38. soNovalis, Heinrich von Ofterdingen, trans. Palmer Hilty (New York, 1964),p. 114. LiteraryNotebooks, p. 1672, cited in Marshall "5Schlegel, Brown, The Shape of German Romanticism (Ithaca and London, 1979),p. 85. 52Shelley,A Defence of Poetry, in Essays and Letters by PercyBysshe Shelley, ed. ErnestRhys (London,1887),p. 12. 53Schubert:A Documentary Biography, ed. Otto Erich Deutsch (London, 1946), p. 337; trans. from Franz Schubert's Letters and Other Writings,ed. O. E. Deutsch (London, 1928), p. 77.
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structures, Beethoven achieved what Schiller had thought to be impossible in principle-to map the infinite without losing hold of the center. Repeatedly he gave rein to chaos without being overwhelmed, in the widest spectrum of forms and with a limitless imagery of the seemingly unsymbolizable. Thus, in the last instance, he transcended the existential states of yearning and imperfection, creating a series of individual universes which areat the same time perfected and dynamically open. VI Beethoven's life, too, embodies a precarious search for order. Perhapsthis is why the Ninth Symphony-beyond its mythic universality, beneath its congruence with certain conventions of contemporaneous thought-appears to touch upon so many of its composer's inner preoccupations. Of course we can never know the ways in which the Ninth Symphony was carved out of Beethoven's own experience. But the objects of his desire seem to be quite on the surface here: for the reconstruction of a splintered family, recaptureof an idyllic past, achievement of a loving brotherhood, attainment of an extended moment of pure joy, and eternal life. No small order.The objects of his fears-more obscure, even opaque-are equally at hand. To Beethoven, chaos is not merely the riot of disorganized sense impressions that constitute the flux of perception, nor is it simply a convenient mythological category to serve as pretext for a mythopoeic symphony. It is these, of course, but it is also the totality of those tendencies within his personality that require the imposition of order: the libidinal drives toward forbidden objects; the egoistic and authoritarian components of his character,constantly at war with his innate altruism; the eruptions of irrationality, countered by a grandiose complexity of aesthetic structure; a variety of terrors, known and unknown-of illegitimacy, passivity, deprivation, punishment, and death. And
the yearning for chaos-the ultimate sign for An exterminatthe loss of boundaries-itself. ing Sehnsucht is transcended by its own symbolization. Ever fearful of death (except, it seems, at the very end), prone on occasion to suicide, and preoccupied not only with immortality but with mortality, Beethoven in his last years came to
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know that the comedy would not last much longer. "I often despair and would like to die," he wrote to Zmeskall as he enteredhis last decade. "ForI can foresee no end to all my infirmities. God have mercy upon me, I consider mysoon have finished playing my part."54 His body knew it was dying, particularlyafter the attack of jaundice in 1821, the first clear symptom of the illness that eventually took his life. In the face of physical decline, and of the emotional chaos that had undermined his psychological integrity for a full decade, Beethoven's creativity may have served to ward off death, to stimulate the will to continue-to provide an imaginative counterbalance against the forces of disintegration. The Missa solemnis has the implication of a double question to the Deity: Am I merely mortal? Is there hope for eternal life? "Even if you don't believe in it [religion],you
will be glorified. . . . You will arise with me self as good as lost. . ... Thank God that I shall
from the dead-because you must," writes his friend Karl Peters assuringly in the Conversation Book for April 1823.55 Even a frivolous canon, composed as a gift to his physician in 1825, tells the story of his fears, his helplessness, and his faith in music as a countervailing force against death. "Doctor,bar the door to Death! Music too will help in my hour of need."56 For Beethoven, music, whatever else it represented,was also a form of protective magic, in whose efficacy he placed his full trust. "Apollo and the Muses are not yet going to let me be handedover to Death," he wrote to Schotts S6hne during the creative surge that bridgedthe Ninth Symphony and the late quartets, "for I still owe them so much; and before my departure for the Elysian fields [the reference to Elysium is not fortuitous] I must leave behind me what the Eternal spirit has infused into my soul and bids me complete."57 The Heiliger Dankgesang of the A-Minor Quartet,
Heinz K6hlerand DagmarBeck, vol. III(Leipzig,1983),pp. 158-59. 56"Doktor, sperrtdas Tor dem Tod, / Note hilft auch aus der Not." WoO 189. Letters of Beethoven III, 1141 (letter 1308, 17 57Anderson, September1824).
Konversationshefte,
ed. Karl-
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op. 132, fuses gratitude-to music, to the Godhead-for continued life with the foretaste of supernal beauty beyond life itself.58The nullification of death through its transfiguration into bliss is a covert programof the Ninth Symphony. Beneath his frequent protestations of adherence to Reason, Beethoven was far from immune to the pull of the Romantic Nachtseite of existence. In some way, the Ninth Symphony may be read as a succession of flights from the NightSide, as a search for alternative refuges from an inner or outer annihilating agency. Each refuge is not only impermanent but is somehow suffused with a sense of potential dissolution, thus compelling the pilgrimage onward. The catastrophic implications of the first movement are unmistakable, thrown into even higher relief by the fleeting moments of yearning encoded into the fabric of inexorable pursuit. The sense of flight spills over into the scherzo, but now parodistically transformed from tragedy into farce. The trio flees into the primitive, to Nature, to childhood, to the communal, to the Arcadian Golden Age. But Death dwells in Arcadia, its presence there marked by manifold symbols of decay and all-devouring time: "Whenever,in a beautiful landscape," wrote the poet Jacobi, "I encounter a tomb with the inscription Auch Ich war in Arkadien ["I, too, was in Arcadia"], I point it out to my friends; we stop a moment, Arcapress each other's hands, and proceed."59 dia is "the retrospective vision of an unsurpassable happiness, enjoyed in the past, unattainable ever after, yet enduringly alive in the memory," wrote Panofsky: "a bygone happiness ended by death."60? Of the Adagio Beethoven wrote, "This is too tender.'61Evidently at that moment, and in this work, he found insufficient the modalities of
beauty, sensuousness, and perfection, which he may have seen as leading to passivity, and, beyond passivity, to the termination of life. At least, this is one implication of Beethoven's comment, which has its parallelin Schiller's caveat that the beautiful, in contrast to the sublime, achieves a reconciliation of man with the sensuous world of objects, thereby disabling activity. Schiller prefers the sublime, which "opens to us a road to overstep the limits of the world of sense, in which the feeling of the beautiful would foreverimprison us."62 Werdie Sch6nheit mit Augen, angeschaut IstdemTodeschonanheimgegeben. (Platen) whose have (He eyes gazeduponbeauty, Is already delivered overto death.) It does not requirea Paterianequation of beauty with death to understand Beethoven's need at last to emerge from the realm of the Sirens. It was enough that he had permitted himself, in luxuriant and reverent detail, to partake of these forbidden delights before yielding them up at last. Of course Beethoven knew that the Adagio was the necessary precondition of the Ode to Joy. As early as the Eroica Symphony, he had learned that every resurrection requires a funeral; here he demonstrates that every awakening presupposes a sleep--a turning inwardfrom which to gather strength for action. The symphony's triumphant, final refuge is in Elysium, where those shades of the fortunate deadfavoredby the gods escape the Plains of Asphodel and discover "the Elysian plain / Beyond death's gloomy portal."63In the Eroica Symphony, Egmont, Coriolanus, and Christus am Oelberge, the death of the hero is explicit. In the Ninth Symphony his death is implicit, the transition is miraculously accomplished, and he is neither mourned nor exalted as an individual,
we may recall that in the late quartetsBeethoven is 58Here preoccupiedwith a baroquetheme type whose symbolism embracesthe dualism of deathandresistance to death.Erich Schenk, "Barockbei Beethoven,"in Beethoven und die Gegenwart, ed. Arnold Schmitz (Berlinand Bonn, 1937), pp. 210-16. 59Johann GeorgJacobi,Winterreise(1769). Panofsky, "Etin ArcadiaEgo:Poussin and the Ele6?Erwin giac Tradition,"Meaning in the Visual Arts (GardenCity, N. Y., 1955),p. 296. Zweite Beethoveniana, 190. 61Nottebohm,
62Schiller,"On the Sublime," Aesthetical and Philosophical Essays, I, 131. This (atypical)aspect of Schiller'saesthetics is analyzedin LeonardP. Wessell, Jr.,"Schillerand German Romanticism," Studies in Romanticism 10 (1971), 177-98. Schiller, of course, was also perhapsthe first aesthetician to describe the pathway between beauty andfreedom, which he mappedin his Letterson the Aesthetical Education of Man (1795). "The Triumphof Love." 63Schiller, 21
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19TH
CENTURY MUSIC
25 s
Brider! ber'm Sternen zelt mug
II -Vn.
Va.
en
g mu
mug A
.-ein
.her
Va.ter
woh
nen
Example 13: movt. IV, Andante Maestoso, mm. 25-32. but merged through transfiguration into the community of heroes. eureBahn, Laufet, Briider, wie ein Heldzum siegen! freudig, runyourcourse, (Brothers, like a heroto the victory!) joyfully, Death and resurrection-a pairing central to the Romantic outlook-here occur simultaneously rather than successively.64 In Elysium,
64"Inmythical thinking there is no definite, clearly delimited moment in which life passes into death and death into
death is no longer chaotic and destructive, but affirmative, loving, and transcendent. "Here, crowned at last, love never knows decay."65 In Elysium, Beethoven may at last have found his warrant of immortality. The Ode to Joymelody appearsto herald a personal as well as a universal resurrection. For though the images of this Utopia belong to us all, the underlying impulse contains a unique-if unrecoveralife. It considers birth as a return and death as a survival." Ernst Cassirer, The Philosophy of Symbolic Forms, vol. II (New Haven and London, 1955),p. 37. 65Schiller, "Elysium."
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ble--biographical nucleus. In that resurrection, Beethoven may have unconsciously expected to find answers to several long-standing riddles. Seizing upon an ambiguity in the reports of his birth-year, and aware of other rumors that he was the illegitimate son of King Friedrich Wilhelm II, Beethoven had long been in search of his origins, seeking to discover both how and when he came into being, seeking reconciliation with the memory of his real parents even as he sought noble and royal surrogatesfor them. His longing for an ideal father merges with the symphony's quest for a divine father. He dedicates this masterwork to King Friedrich Wilhelm III,the son of his rumored father. In it he celebrates the principle of fraternity;indeed he succeeds in creating the most universal paradigm of fraternity in world culture. Yet there is uncertainty, even in Elysium. Beethoven/Schiller would not fix either time or tense for us: "Alle Menschen werden Briider"("All men become brothers"). The tense is neither past, present, nor even quite future, but a process tense, implying what will happen "if." Slochower suggests: "Poetically, it is a prayer for brotherhood."66Fraternity remains upon the horizon of possibility. Nor is the search for an ideal fatherquite concluded. The Deity may be tacitly present in the "Creation" scenario of the opening and explicitly present in the text of the finale; he presides over both ends of the temporal spectrum. But, though present he is not yet discovered. "Seek him beyond the stars!Beyondthe starshe surely dwells"-and Beethoven's music supplies a heart-rending question mark (ex. 13). The
chorus's measured rhythmic unison disintegrates on the word "mug," which is sounded successively by the basses, tenors and altos, and finally by the sopranos, as though by repeated emphasis to query what they dare not acknowledge in reality, that the multitudes have been embracing before an absent deity, Deus absconditus. Despite the resounding affirmations that try to erase the memory of this moment of the Andante Maestoso, Beethoven has led us to understand that the question indeed remains alive. In the Messianic myth, the world is redeemed, and its redemption coincides with the end of history. But Beethoven is no mere translatorof old stories; whatever his models, he invented a new mythology at the dawn of our age. We may add Beethoven to Northrop Frye's short list of mythmakers: "Those who have really changed the modern world-Rousseau, Freud, Marxare those who have changed its mythology, and whatever is beneficent in their influence has to do with giving man increased power over his own vision."67 In Beethoven's re-creationof myth, history is kept open--as quest for the unreachable,for the as-yet-undiscovered, for the vision of an ultimate felicity. He refuses to accept that history is closed at either its source or its goal. Fora perfected orderwould signal the termination of life and of striving. In the Ninth Symphony, the condition of Joyis elusive, even in Elysium. The search continues for a hidden God, a distant beloved, for brotherhood.And Creation can begin again merely by the omission of a majoror minor third.
66Personal communication.
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