If it's the joke it's:
He is decomposing.
He is Decomposing
Isk
because
If it's the joke it's: He is decomposing.
He didn't spend ALL of his time erasing music. If that were true, we wouldn't have any music of his to enjoy. He did write a lot of sketches while he composed, and he edited and re-wrote a lot. The legend and possibly the myth around Beethoven is that he did this to an extreme degree. I'm not sure whether or not this is true. This legend or myth may have developed in order to contrast him with Mozart, for whom a quite different legend arose. Many believe that Mozart virtually never edited or changed his music, and that he created entire compositions in his head; it only remained for him to jot down the notes when it was convenient. Both of these legends may be a little less true than most people assume. What may be true is that Beethoven had to work and re-work material until he found the right stuff, and Mozart may have been a little more facile than Beethoven. I personally find Beethoven more appealing because he had to (and did) apparently exert more effort in order to produce his works of genius.Additional: Beethoven didn't erase anything. He crossed out a lot, usually with bold, angry-looking strokes. He probably tore some up and threw it away, but we have most of his notebooks and scores.
Beethoven's greatest liturgical music is found in his Mass in D major. Beethoven is one of the world's greatest musicians of all time. Most of his music is considered classical music.
No. He was unable to. By the time he was in his forties, Beethoven was profoundly deaf. He could not hear his own music, except in his head.
because
Because he is now dead and decomposing.
If it's the joke it's: He is decomposing.
He didn't spend ALL of his time erasing music. If that were true, we wouldn't have any music of his to enjoy. He did write a lot of sketches while he composed, and he edited and re-wrote a lot. The legend and possibly the myth around Beethoven is that he did this to an extreme degree. I'm not sure whether or not this is true. This legend or myth may have developed in order to contrast him with Mozart, for whom a quite different legend arose. Many believe that Mozart virtually never edited or changed his music, and that he created entire compositions in his head; it only remained for him to jot down the notes when it was convenient. Both of these legends may be a little less true than most people assume. What may be true is that Beethoven had to work and re-work material until he found the right stuff, and Mozart may have been a little more facile than Beethoven. I personally find Beethoven more appealing because he had to (and did) apparently exert more effort in order to produce his works of genius.Additional: Beethoven didn't erase anything. He crossed out a lot, usually with bold, angry-looking strokes. He probably tore some up and threw it away, but we have most of his notebooks and scores.
Beethoven's greatest liturgical music is found in his Mass in D major. Beethoven is one of the world's greatest musicians of all time. Most of his music is considered classical music.
No. He was unable to. By the time he was in his forties, Beethoven was profoundly deaf. He could not hear his own music, except in his head.
who every play on beethoven the movie about the dog Whomever wants to play Beethoven ... there are many many people who love Beethoven's music and play it all the time. It's a matter of personal preference.
He didn't. The style of jazz music wasn't developed until long after Beethoven's death.
Vienna, Austria
Beethoven was not born blind; nor did he become blind. Beethoven became deaf in his late twenties.
Ofcourse he spend more time with his family -__-
No. Beethoven, like most of his contemporaries, did not go to college. Colleges are a relatively modern institution. Music students in the 1700s and 1800s may have sometimes received instruction in conservatoriums, but Beethoven was not one of these.