Overture Magazine - 2018-19 Season BSO_Overture_Sept_Oct | Page 17
BEETHOVEN EROICA SYMPHONY
The hero thereafter celebrated in the
“Eroica” became an ideal rather than
an actual human being.
Indeed, the Symphony itself was a
heroic act: shocking its first audiences
and setting a new symphonic
template for future composers to
emulate. In a work twice the length
of previous symphonies, Beethoven
had expanded 18 th -century symphonic
structures beyond his contemporaries’
powers of comprehension. Even
more challenging was the “Eroica’s”
harmonic daring and overall tone
of aggression. It did not seek to
please and amuse its listeners but to
challenge and provoke them.
We hear the challenge in the two
loud E-f lat chords that open the first
movement. More than introductory
gestures, they are the germinal
motive of the symphony. From
them Beethoven builds the repeated
sforzando chords, with their arresting
dislocation of the beat, that we hear
a few moments later. Just before the
end of the exposition section, he
adds teeth-grinding dissonance to
this mix, and in the development
section, this concoction explodes in
a shattering crisis.
The movement’s principal theme
is a simple swinging between the
notes of an E-flat -major chord that
quickly stumbles on a dissonant
C-sharp. It will take the rest of this
giant movement, with its expanded
development and coda sections,
to resolve this stumble. So intense
is Beethoven’s forward propulsion
that his themes never have time to
blossom into melody. In fact, the most
compelling theme waits until the
development, when oboes and cellos
introduce it as part of the recovery
from the hammering dissonant chords.
The second-movement funeral
march in C minor is one of
Beethoven’s most imposing and
profound movements. In his superb
new biography, Jan Swafford tells us
the musical style here was inspired by
the grand funeral marches composed
for public occasions during the French
Revolution. Over imitation drum
rolls in the strings, the famous
threnody unfolds its majestic course.
It is succeeded by an episode in
C major that injects rays of sunshine
and hope, with fanfares proclaiming
the greatness of the fallen hero.
Then the dirge melody returns and
swiftly becomes an imposing fugue:
counterpoint intensifying emotion.
In the movement’s remarkable
closing measures, the march theme
disintegrates into sobbing fragments.
The third-movement scherzo provides
light-hearted relief after the weight and
drama of the opening movements. Yet
it too retains intensity as its music, in
Lewis Lockwood’s words, repeatedly
traces a “pattern of rapid growth from
a mysterious pianissimo to a rousing
fortissimo.” Beethoven re-introduces a
gentler variant of the off-the-downbeat
hammer blows from the first movement;
eventually, they briefly push the three-
beat meter into two beats.
After struggle, the finale brings joy
in the form of sublime musical play.
It is an imposing set of variations on a
theme Beethoven had used three times
before: in an early set of contredances,
in the Creatures of Prometheus, and
for the piano variations now known
as the “Eroica” Variations. Beethoven
first isolates the bass line of his theme
as a witty little tune in its own right,
only later giving us the theme itself in
the woodwinds. In Swafford’s words,
“he has shaped the finale as a steady
intensification from the light style of
a dance to a heroic voice.” Elaborate
fugal passages and a grandly martial
episode culminate in a sublime
apotheosis: a group of variations in
a slower tempo that proclaims the
hero’s immortality. The Presto climax
is capped by the symphony’s opening
E-flat hammer blows, now triumphant
rather than tragic.
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Notes by Janet E. Bedell, © 201 8
S E P – O C T 2018 / OV E R T U R E
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