Tag Archives: Handel

A Question for Music-Lovers: Did Beethoven Compose at the Speed at Which He Intended the Work to be Performed?

There is no evidence that anybody has ever asked that question. But that is no reason we should not ask it now. Let us, therefore, consider this excerpt from an invented exchange of letters. (Elements of it, however, are based on real correspondence.)

On July 3, 1812, the eleven-year old girl Emilie M. asked the question (among many others) in an adulatory letter to Beethoven in these terms:

“…I have been practicing your violin sonata in A major. You marked the last movement presto. Did you compose it presto?”

To which he answered three weeks later from Treplitz, a spa in Bohemia:

“My dear good Emilie, my dear friend, forgive me for the delay in answering your letter. I have been plagued by constant illness and I am here for the restoration of my health. Your praise is too immoderate; do not snatch the laurel wreath from Handel, Haydn, Mozart – to them it belongs, to me not yet.

“You ask whether I composed the presto movement in the sonata to which you refer at presto speed. The answer is YES! In my mind I heard it presto, but when I wrote it down I struggled with it at adagio speed, again and again. How I envy Rossini, who apparently writes his adagio arias at presto speed!

“Continue, my dear Emilie. Do not only practice art but penetrate to the very heart of it. This it deserves, for only art and science raise men to the Godhead….”

An Amazing Discovery While Listening to Handel’s Messiah

No, not that Hallelujah is a transliteration of the Hebrew word הללו יה, meaning “Praise Jah” (from the first two letters of YHWH).

THAT everybody knows.

No, it was amazing to discover that the Jesus story was anticipated eight hundred years ahead of time by the Prophet Isaiah. We are in good company. Saint Jerome (c. 342–420) also discovered it. “He was more of an Evangelist than a Prophet,” he wrote, “because he described all the Mysteries of the Church of Christ so vividly that you would assume he was not prophesying about the future, but rather was composing a history of past events” (Wikipedia).

The alto recitative – #8 in Part 1 – Behold a virgin will conceive was written by the Prophet Isiah, as was the aria #23, He was despised and rejected, and the Chorus #12 – For unto us a child is born, and the government shall be upon His shoulder and His name shall be wonderful.

Trust the angry old prophet with his messianic vision, 800 years before the event, to have originated not only the virgin birth but also the Christmas story.

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A video about life at the University of Toronto in 1942 has been posted on YouTube.