Battle Symphony

Ludwig van BEETHOVEN

Item#: 26963 We're sorry, this item has been sold

Battle Symphony
Battle Symphony
Battle Symphony
Battle Symphony

“THUNDEROUSLY ACCLAIMED”: BEETHOVEN’S “BATTLE SYMPHONY”

BEETHOVEN, Ludwig van. Wellingtons-Sieg, oder: die Schlacht bey Vittoria; in Musik gesetzt von Ludwig van Beethoven. 91tes Werk. Vollstandige Partitur. Wien: S. A. Steiner und Comp., [1816]. Quarto, contemporary marbled boards sympathetically rebacked and recornered in calf gilt, original marbled endpapers and edges. Housed in a custom clamshell box.

First edition of the full score of Beethoven’s “Battle Symphony,” commemorating a victory of Wellington over Napoleon.

In 1813, Johann Maelzel (the inventor of the ear trumpet, the mechanical chess player and the metronome) persuaded Beethoven to embark on a large-scale work, a "battle symphony" commemorating and "depicting" the Duke of Wellington's victory over Napoleon at Vittoria on June 21. The symphony was meant to showcase Maelzel's "Panharmonikon," a massive mechanical orchestra featuring automated flutes, clarinets, trumpets, violins, cellos, drums, cymbals and triangle. But Beethoven, quarrelling with Maelzel, abandoned the idea and began to turn the piece into a full symphony for conventional orchestra. The finished work, which incorporates "Rule Britannia" and a fugal treatment of "God Save the King," "was thunderously acclaimed at two charity concerts on 8 and 12 December 1813-together with the Seventh Symphony, which had not been heard before. The Battle Symphony had to be repeated three weeks later, and again on 24 February 1814" (New Grove, 368). The full score was published in 1816 simultaneously with the individual parts. Music text in lithography. Kinsky-Halm, 253.

Text fresh and clean, binding with some light rubbing to boards; lovingly rebacked to match original binding style. A near-fine copy. Scarce.

add to my wishlist ask an Expert