Symphony No. 3 in E flat major, op. 55, by Ludwig van Beethoven, known as Eroica<\/em>, is a work considered by many to be the dawn of musical romanticism, since it breaks several schemes of the traditional classical symphony. It was initially dedicated to Napoleon Bonaparte. Ludwig Van Beethoven is considered as one of the most influential composers in history and the Eroica as one of the most important compositions ever written.<\/strong><\/p>\n
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This symphony is one of Beethoven’s most famous works<\/strong>, which he originally intended to dedicate to Napoleon Bonaparte<\/a> (he called it Bonaparte). The idea of composing a symphony in honor of Europe’s “liberator” was suggested by Marshal Jean-Baptiste Bernadotte<\/a>, French ambassador to Vienna in 1798, or by Rodolphe Kreutzer<\/a>, violinist to whom Beethoven dedicated a sonata. Bonaparte was, with the difference of only one year, an exact contemporary of the musician, who not only felt a lively admiration for his hero<\/strong>, but more or less consciously, had established a kind of parallelism between their respective destinies<\/strong>.<\/p>\n
To be a young composer in the capital of the Austrian Empire<\/a>, to have the backing of the city\u2019s aristocracy, then composing a symphony with the name of the arch enemy of Austria and the establishment, was an act of bravery<\/strong>! No other composer dared to do such thing!<\/p>\n
Beethoven began composing his Third Symphony around 1802<\/strong> during his stay in Heiligenstadt and ended it between the spring of 1803 and May 1804. The first private audition<\/a> took place in May or June of that same year at the home of Prince Joseph Franz von Lobkowitz<\/a>, to whom it was finally dedicated. The first public performance<\/a> was given at the Theater an der Wien in Vienna on April 7, 1805,<\/strong> with the composer as conductor.<\/p>\n
The Third Symphony was Beethoven’s first to be performed in Paris by the Conservatory Concert Society<\/a>, in March 1828.<\/p>\n
|Related:<\/span> Was Beethoven Classical or Romantic era composer?<\/a><\/p>\n
The \u201cEroica” symphony stems from a profound crisis of Beethoven<\/strong>, depressed by his health problems and his worsening deafness<\/a>, which leads him to question his future in music and even weigh suicide<\/strong>. In 1802 he retires to the quiet village of Heiligenstadt, near Vienna, with his mind taken by the most dark thoughts. But he emerges from the crisis with the will to move forward<\/strong> and make a great turn to his art.<\/p>\n
|Related:<\/span> Beethoven\u2019s Heiligenstadt Testament<\/a><\/p>\n
Soon it will be greeted as an absolute triumph!<\/p>\n
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Symphony No. 3 in E flat major, op. 55, by Ludwig van Beethoven, known as Eroica, is a work considered by many to be the dawn of musical romanticism, since it breaks several schemes of the traditional classical symphony. It was initially dedicated to Napoleon Bonaparte. Ludwig Van Beethoven is considered as one of the most influential composers in history … <\/p>\n
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