03/04/2024
Center for Beethoven Research at Boston University
America's premier research center for Beethoven studies, directed by Lewis Lockwood and Jeremy Yudkin
Co-Directors: Jeremy Yudkin, Lewis Lockwood
Admin: Matthew Cron
The Center for Beethoven Research @ BU fosters ties with other universities, centers, and academic departments at Boston University and elsewhere, including the Beethoven-Haus in Bonn. The Center promotes scholarship in a wide spectrum of Beethoven studies, with a focus on analysis and criticism, sketch and autograph studies, biogr
03/04/2024
THE BOSTON UNIVERSITY CENTER FOR BEETHOVEN RESEARCH
presents
“BEETHOVEN’S NINTH SYMPHONY: A 200-YEAR PERSPECTIVE”
ALL-DAY CONFERENCE, MARCH 27, 2024
at Boston University’s Hillel House
213 Bay State Road, Boston MA 02215
The premiere of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony took place in Vienna two hundred years ago this spring, on May 7, 1824. A review published a few days later stated:
“Beethoven has long shown through his symphonies so high a level of artistic creation in this branch of composition, that since then it has become difficult for any composer to succeed in the wake of this Helicon. This newest symphony, however, is certainly the greatest work of art that Beethoven, with his full Titan's strength, has brought into existence.”
Wiener allgemeine Theater-Zeitung 8 (May 13, 1824), 230-31.
Still today this composition is regarded as “one of the supreme masterpieces of the Western tradition” and “an international symbol of unity and affirmation.” (Cook, 1993.)
There is no more iconic a piece of music than Beethoven’s Ninth. It has been played at the Olympics to embody international cooperation. Performances of the Ninth with thousands singing in the chorus mark the New Year throughout Japan. Wagner performed it in 1872 to mark the beginning of construction on his opera house at Bayreuth. In 1972, the music of the Ode to Joy was adopted as the Anthem of Europe by the Council of Europe and subsequently by the European Union. It is said that in 1980 the size and duration of the compact disc was settled upon so that a single disc could contain an entire 74-minute performance of the Ninth Symphony. And in 2001, Beethoven's autograph score of the Ninth Symphony, held by the Berlin State Library, was added to the United Nations Heritage list, becoming the first musical score to be recognized in this way.
Researchers and audiences continue to find new insight and meaning in this remarkable work, and new discoveries are reported all the time. In 2020 a completely new critical edition of the whole score was published in Munich. This conference at Boston University brings together the latest findings by the most distinguished Beethoven scholars of our time.
SPONSORED BY BOSTON UNIVERSITY’S SCHOOL OF MUSIC, COLLEGE OF FINE ARTS, AND THE BOSTON UNIVERSITY CENTER FOR THE HUMANITIES
Participants
Julia Adams, Fellowship Advisor, formerly Professor of Music, Franklin and Marshall College, author of Musical Humor and Antonín Dvořák’s Comic Operas.
Mark Evan Bonds, Distinguished Professor Emeritus, University of North Carolina and author of Beethoven: Variations on a Life and The Beethoven Syndrome: Hearing Music as Autobiography.
Beate Angelika Kraus, Resident Scholar, Beethoven Archive, Beethoven-Haus, Bonn, and editor of the new Ninth Symphony critical edition for the Complete Works.
David Levy, Professor Emeritus, Wake Forest University, and author of Beethoven: The Ninth Symphony.
James Parsons, Distinguished Professor, Missouri State University, and editor of The Cambridge Companion to the Lied.
Christopher Reynolds, Distinguished Professor Emeritus, University of California at Davis, and author of Wagner, Schumann and the Lessons of Beethoven’s Ninth.
Elaine Sisman, Anne Parsons Bender Professor of Music, Columbia University, author of Haydn and the Classical Variation.
The conference will take place in the second-floor lounge of Boston University’s Hillel House, which is a comfortable and intimate space. A performance of Liszt’s extraordinary arrangement of the Ninth Symphony for solo piano and singers will take place in the evening of March 27 at Boston University’s Tsai Performance Center.
PROGRAM
Hillel House, Boston University, 2nd-Floor Lounge
8:00AM CONTINENTAL BREAKFAST
9:00AM Jeremy Yudkin: Welcome
9:15AM Beate Angelika Kraus: “Beethoven's Ninth Symphony – On the Edition of a Magnum Opus and its Multiple Manifestations.”
10:00AM Mark Evan Bonds: “Second Thoughts”
10:45 COFFEE/TEA BREAK
11:15AM David Levy: "The Ninth Symphony: Vision, Illusion, or Delusion?"
12-2PM LUNCH (ad libitum)
2PM Elaine Sisman: “A Lexicon of Humor in the Molto Vivace of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony: Composition and Reception.”
2:45PM James Parsons, “What the Choral Fantasy Can Tell Us About the Choral Finale.”
3:30-4:00 COFFEE/TEA BREAK
4-4:45PM Christopher Reynolds: “The Narrative and Musical Debts of Wagner’s Ring to Beethoven’s Ninth.”
5-6PM BREAK (come sopra)
6-7:30 PRIVATE DINNER FOR PARTICIPANTS AT THE BLUE RIBBON BRASSERIE (at the Hotel Commonwealth, Kenmore Square – ten minutes’ walk)
8-10PM CONCERT (Tsai Performance Center, 685 Commonwealth Avenue – ten minutes’ walk)
PROGRAM
(A possibly world-premiere performance of Franz Liszt’s transcription of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony for Solo Piano with Choral Finale.)
Tsai Performance Center, Boston University, 8PM, Wednesday, March 27, 2024
***
Julia Adams, “Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony: Liszt’s Formidable Transcription for Solo Piano.”
Ludwig van Beethoven, Symphonie No. 9 avec choeur finale sur l’ode de Schiller “An
die Freude,” S. 657 FRANZ LISZT (1811-1886)
Chengcheng Ma, piano
Boston University Chamber Chorus
Conductor, John Black
11/09/2023
Beethoven Symposium: Creation and Temporality
Next TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 2023
Join us next Tuesday for an afternoon of presentations and an evening of performances! Admission is FREE and open to the public.
Guests include:
Professor Barbara Barry, Hebrew University, Jerusalem
and
Dr. Lucy Turner, Columbia University
with performances by graduate students of the School of Music’s string department and piano department.
Symposium Program:
3:15-4:30 pm — Open rehearsal wit performers and scholars (Marshall Room CFA 254)
5:00-7:00 pm— Formal presentation of scholarly papers, with musical examples (Marshall Room)
8:00 pm — Concert: (CFA Concert Hall)
Beethoven Piano Trio in Bb, Op. 97 (“Archduke”)
Schubert Piano Trio in Eb, Op. 100
For more information visit: www.bu.edu/beethovencenter
03/22/2022
Reframing Beethoven 2022
Concerts featured at the conference are FREE and open to the public!
From More info: https://www.bu.edu/beethovencenter
THE UNKNOWN BEETHOVEN: SUPERB GEMS FOR PIANO SOLO AND DUO - Thursday, March 24, 8pm
“HE UNDERSTOOD EVERYTHING”: A TRIBUTE TO BEETHOVEN - Friday, March 25, 8:30pm
“NOTICING AND RESPONDING TO ALL THE EXPRESSION MARKINGS IN BEETHOVEN’S AUTOGRAPH MANUSCRIPTS” - Saturday, March 26, 8pm
03/19/2022
Another sneak peak at another concert featured at the Reframing Beethoven concert NEXT WEEK!
“He Understood Everything”: A tribute to Beethoven
Come enjoy a concert of lesser-known orchestral and choral works by both Beethoven and other composers who composed with Beethoven in mind.
Featuring the BU Symphony Orchestra and the Boston University Singers!
Friday March 25 at 8:30pm
For more info and registration visit:
03/03/2022
THE UNKNOWN BEETHOVEN: SUPERB GEMS FOR PIANO SOLO AND DUO
Thursday, March 24, 8pm
Sneak peak at the first concert of the Reframing Beethoven Conference!
Come enjoy some lesser known Beethoven piano works that even YOU might not know!
Our wonderful performers include:
Pavel Nersessian (Boston University), Boaz Sharon (Boston University), and Anna Arazi (Harvard University).
For registration and details visit: bu.edu/beethovencenter
See you there!
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Address
Boston, MA
02215
