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Beethovens French Piano
Publicatie

Beethoven's French Piano

  • Auteur/artiest
    Tom Beghin
  • Publicatiejaar
    2022
  • Datum
    28 jul 2022
  • Uitgever
    The University of Chicago Press
  • Cluster
    DeClassifying the Classics
  • Serie
    In samenwerking met...
  • Format
    Boek
  • ISBN
    9780226818351
  • DOI
  • Prijs
    $ 55

A Tale of Ambition and Frustration

Using a replica of Beethoven’s Erard piano, scholar and performer Tom Beghin launches a striking reinterpretation of a key period of Beethoven’s work.
Table of contents Bonus material

In 1803 Beethoven acquired a French piano from the Erard Frères workshop in Paris. The composer was “so enchanted with it,” one visitor reported, “that he regards all the pianos made here as rubbish by comparison.” While Beethoven loved its sound, the touch of the French keyboard was much heavier than that of the Viennese pianos he had been used to. Hoping to overcome this drawback, he commissioned a local technician to undertake a series of revisions, with ultimately disappointing results. Beethoven set aside the Erard piano for good in 1810.
 
Beethoven’s French Piano returns the reader to this period of Beethoven’s enthusiasm for all things French. What traces of the Erard’s presence can be found in piano sonatas like his “Waldstein” and “Appassionata”? To answer this question, Tom Beghin worked with a team of historians and musicians to commission the making of an accurate replica of the Erard piano. As both a scholar and a recording artist, Beghin is uniquely positioned to guide us through this key period of Beethoven’s work. Whether buried in archives, investigating the output of the French pianists who so fascinated Beethoven, or seated at the keyboard of his Erard, Beghin thinks and feels his way into the mind of the composer, bringing startling new insights into some of the best-known piano compositions of all time.

384 pages | 11 color plates, 37 halftones, 27 line drawings, 11 tables | 6 x 9

Table of Contents 

Click on the red arrows to access the extra material

  • Introduction - Parallel Tales 
  • Chapter One - Aspirations and Entanglements (→)
  • Vignette 1 - The Letter (by Tilman Skowroneck)
  • Chapter Two - The Psychology of Waiting (→)
  • Chapter Three - Malleability of Tone (→)
  • Chapter Four - The Lure of una corda (→)
  • Vignette 2 - Two Visitors in Paris (with Robin Blanton, Michael Pecak, and Tilman Skowroneck)
  • Chapter Five - The Perfect Instrument
  • Chapter Six - An Unlikely Competitor (→)
  • Chapter Seven - Continuous Sound (→)
  • Vignette 3 - A Gift Not a Given (with Robin Blanton)
  • Chapter Eight - The Vertical/Horizontal Paradox (→)
  • Chapter Nine - A Grand Sonata (→)
  • Chapter Ten - A Prize-winning Teacher (→)
  • Vignette 4 - Building a Replica (Chris Maene in conversation with Robin Blanton) (→)
  • Chapter Eleven - Revisiting the Revisions (→)
  • Chapter Twelve - Mixing Sound (→)
  • Epilogue - Time and Resonance (→)

Bonus Material

  • Vignette 5: Faster and Faster (by Charles Shrader) (→)
  • Louis Adam, Piano Method of the Conservatoire (Paris: Naderman, 1804–05), translated by Tom Beghin, with Mikayla Jensen-Large (2021) (→)

Original Quotations (→)

Lezing-documentaire

Met Tom Beghin, Robert Adelson, Chris Maene, Jeanne Roudet, Jacques-Oliver Boudon, and Stephan Gschwendtner.

In het Engels, Nederlands, Frans, Duits met Engelse ondertitels.

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