Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Ludwig van Beethoven - Fur Elise (Für Elise)

"It is not certain who "Elise" was. Max Unger suggested that Ludwig Nohl may have transcribed the title incorrectly and the original work may have been named "Für Therese",  a reference to Therese Malfatti von Rohrenbach zu Dezza (1792–1851). She was a friend and student of Beethoven's to whom he proposed in 1810, though she turned him down to marry the Austrian nobleman and state official Wilhelm von Droßdik in 1816.  According to a recent study by Klaus Martin Kopitz, there is flimsy evidence that the piece was written for the German soprano singer Elisabeth Röckel (1793–1883), later the wife ofJohann Nepomuk Hummel. "Elise", as she was called by a parish priest (she called herself "Betty" too), had been a friend of Beethoven's since 1808.  In the meantime, the Austrian musicologist Michael Lorenz has shown that Rudolf Schachner, who in 1851 inherited Therese von Droßdik's musical scores, was the illegitimate son of Babette Bredl (who in 1865 let Nohl copy the autograph in her possession). Thus the autograph must have come to Babette Bredl from Therese von Droßdik's estate and Kopitz's hypothesis is refuted."  (via. Wikipedia.org)
Just catching up on some music I should have taken more seriously as a child.  Here I am playing Beethovens most popular Bagatelle in A minor, a.k.a. Fur Elise (Für Elise).  I have finished recording Bach's Invention's and plan on starting to record the Three-Part Sinfonias soon.  

1 comment:

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger... Start Facebook