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贝多芬的经历是非常曲折坎坷的,在SAT写作例子中非常具有代表性。
Beethoven, German composer. He is universally recognized as one of the
greatest composers of the Western European music tradition. Beethoven's work
crowned the classical period and also effectively initiated the romantic era in
music. He is one of the few artists who genuinely may be considered
revolutionary.
Life
Born in Bonn, Beethoven showed remarkable talent at an early age. His
father, a court musician, subjected him to a brutal regimen, hoping to exploit
him as a child prodigy. While this plan did not succeed, young Beethoven's gifts
were recognized and nurtured by his teachers and by members of the local
aristocracy. In 1787 Beethoven first visited Vienna, at that time the center of
the music world. There he performed for Mozart, whom he greatly impressed.
In 1792 Haydn invited him to become his student, and Beethoven returned to
Vienna, where he was to remain permanently. However, Beethoven's unorthodox
musical ideas offended the old master, and the lessons were terminated.
Beethoven studied with several other eminent teachers, including Antonio
Salieri, but was developing according to his own singular genius and could no
longer profit greatly from instruction.
Both his breathtaking piano virtuosity and his remarkable compositions won
Beethoven favor among the enlightened aristocracy congregated at Vienna, and he
enjoyed their generous support throughout his life. They were tolerant, too, of
his notoriously boorish manners, careless appearance, and towering rages. His
work itself was widely accepted, if controversial, and from the end of the 1790s
Beethoven was not dependent on patronage for his income.
The year 1801 marked the onset of Beethoven's tragic affliction, his
deafness, which became progressively worse and, by 1817, total. Public
performance eventually became impossible; but his creative work was not
restricted. Beethoven never married; however, he was stormily in and out of love
all his life, always with women unattainable because of marriage or station. His
personal life was further complicated when he was made the guardian of his
nephew Karl, who caused him much anxiety and grief but to whom he nevertheless
remained fondly attached.
Beethoven died, after a long illness, in the midst of a fierce
thunderstorm, and legend has it that the dying man shook his fist in defiance of
the heavens.
Compositions
By the 19th cent., Beethoven's work could already be divided into three
fairly distinct periods. The works of the first period include the First (1800)
and Second (1802) Symphonies; the first three piano concertos (17957800); the
first group of string quartets (1800); and a number of piano sonatas, among them
the Pathique (1798) and the Moonlight Sonata (1801).
Although the compositions of the first period have Beethoven's unmistakable
breadth and vitality, they are dominated by the tradition of Haydn and
Mozart.
Beginning about 1802, Beethoven's work took on new dimensions. The premiere
in 1805 of the massive Third Symphony, known as the Eroica (composed 18037), was
a landmark in cultural history. It signaled a definitive break with the past and
the birth of a new era. The length, structure, harmonies, and orchestration of
the Eroica all broke the formal conventions of classical music; unprecedented
too was its intention to celebrate human freedom and nobility. The symphony was
originally dedicated to Napoleon, who at first symbolized to Beethoven the
spirit of the French Revolution and the liberation of mankind; however, when
Napoleon proclaimed himself emperor, the disillusioned composer renamed his work
the "Heroic Symphony to celebrate the memory of a great man."
The works of Beethoven's middle period, his most productive, include the
Piano Concertos No. 4 (1806) and No. 5 (Emperor Concerto, 1809); the Razumov sky
Quartets (1806); his Ninth Sonata for violin, the Kreutzer Sonata (1803), and
his one Violin Concerto (1806); the Fourth through Eighth Symphonies (180672); a
number of piano sonatas, among them the Waldstein and the Appassionata (both
1804). His sole opera, Fidelio, was produced in its first version inl805 and in
its final form in 1814. Beethoven wrote four overtures for the opera, three of
them known as the Leonore Overture. He also composed overtures to Collin's
Coriolan (1807)and to Goethe's Egmont (1810). From about 1813 to 1820 there was
some slackening in Beethoven's productivity, probably due in part to
difficulties concerning his nephew.
Beethoven's final period dates from about 1816 and is characterized by
works of greater depth and complexity. They include the demanding, nearly
symphonic Hammer klavier sonata(1818) and the other late piano sonatas; the
monumental Ninth Symphony (181773) with itschoral finale based on Schiller's Ode
to Joy; and the Missa Solemnis (181873). The last five string quartets and the
Grosse Fuge (also for quartet), composed in his last years, are considered by
many music lovers to be Beethoven's supreme creations, and by some the most