Beethoven indeed had put all his heart and soul into this symphony. In fact, despite the common belief that the vocal part of the 4th movement, Ode to Joy, was a poem borrowed from Frederich Schiller (1759-1805), Beethoven himself actually wrote portions of it. For example, at the very beginning of the vocal part, i.e., the baritone solo starting on bar 216:
- O Freunde, nicht diese Töne!
- Sondern laßt uns angenehmere anstimmen,
- und freudenvollere.
- Freude! Freude!
Something about Beethoven's eyes? Ah, yes, we are just coming around to that.
The etiology of Beethoven's deafness has never been clear. Several possibilities have been put forth including otosclerosis, syphilis, noise trauma, Paget’s disease, sarcoidosis, and otitis media. None of them was conclusive, however.
It is known that Beethoven suffered from digestive diseases plus rheumatism, various skin abscesses and recurrent infections, ophthalmia, jaundice, and anemia. Ophthalmia? An old term for inflammation of the membranes/coats of the eye, i.e., iritis/uveitis. This, plus Beethoven's own admission of "constant belly aches, diarrhea and bloody stools" suggests that he might have a bad case of ulcerative colitis or Crohn's disease - both of which are associated episodically with deafness.
So the best guess is then: Beethoven's deafness was an immunopathic manifestation of Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD). And iritis/uveitis no doubt flared up from time to time. Unfortunately, after the autopsy, the coroner's report concentrated on the liver and the abdominal fluid, with nothing on the intestines. So we'll never know for sure.
There is a lesson here, though: Patients with IBD need to have their eyes (especially the retina) and ears (at least the hearing) examined regularly - particularly for musicians and composers.
Love this music, used to play in a a viola layer when I was younger. Thanks for the guide.
ReplyDeleteViola playing is quite under-appreciated.
ReplyDeleteYou may get a few laughs out of this site:
http://petelevin.com/violajokes.htm
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Thanks.
I am a fan of the ninth ala "Clockwork Orange".
ReplyDeleteExcellent post! Thank you for sharing info about Beethoven, some of which was new to me and I have been a devout fan of classical music since childhood.
ReplyDelete@customtrains: Usually I'd be horrified with electronic versions of classical composers, but I must agree with you. It's a brilliant alternative version of it, though nothing beats the original symphony!
Beethoven. Too bad his violin works aren't as famous as others. =)
ReplyDeleteGlad the post has grabbed the attention of music lovers.
ReplyDeleteRoland: A good point. Beethoven was fundamentally a piano man. His hearing started to go in his 20s. That may explain why his violin pieces (requiring high-pitch hearing) are not as impressive as his symphonies (loud and voluminous, easier for the hearing impaired). In a combination, e.g., his lone violin concerto, although not technically challenging for the soloist, the demands for tone and expressions overall are quite high.
Customtrains and Arashmania: After listening to the 9th in the A Clock Orange again. I must admit that the syntheszer version is quite good. You can almost sing along the pseudo-vocal parts. Still, Arashmania is right: nothing beats the real thing.
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ReplyDelete(^w^)
Whatever the reason for the man's health problems this is one of the greatest pieces of music ever written. Or one of my big favorites anyhow.
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