by Peter » Fri Dec 29, 2000 4:55 pm
Beethoven is both the greatest composer & my favourite. For the next greatest you could make a case for one of several: Mozart, Bach, Handel; but I should like to stir the name of Schubert into the pot. He is my 2nd favourite composer. It is possible that I favour him a tad above his station, but why we like someone should not necessarily be based on generally-perceived greatness alone, although Schubert is definitely great.<P>Probably, some of my admiration for his music is based on what others may consider to be off-putting; for example, he lived and worked in Vienna at precisely the same time as Beethoven, & as a maturing composer, was always playing "catch-up" to the master; of all the truly great composers, less is known about Schubert than any other - even today, the definitive study of his life & works remains unwritten, despite the passing of his bicentenery (1997); he did not have the strong personality of a Beethoven or a Mozart, & this, coupled with his not being either a child prodigy or a virtuoso/concert-giving pianist, makes him, in many people`s eyes, uninteresting. But how wrong they are!<P>It astonishes me how any Beethoven lover cannot also be a huge admirer of Schubert, who was so far from being just a "poor man`s Beethoven". Schubert was a tortured genius who died at 31 without ever having the appreciation which his music deserved; indeed, his output was so voluminous that it`s amazing how he ever found the time to compose at all with so much laborious writing-down needing to be done.<P>Personal opinions aside, there is a general consensus that Schubert is the greatest lieder writer ever - his 700 songs would take an astonishing 45 hours to play all the way through, whilst it should be remembered that Beethoven is not considered to be a great contributor in this field. Next, consider his piano sonatas. As recently as 1928, Rachmaninov claimed to be unaware that Schubert had written any sonatas, yet the 12 completed (& about as many again uncompleted) in Schubert`s magnificent oevre are so full of such wonderful expression & melodic invention that to ignore them is any music lover`s loss. The sonatas do not have the immediate impact of Beethoven`s, but once you are hooked, you stay hooked. Schubert even expanded the form beyond Beethoven. Once he knew that his early death (through syphilis) was imminent, like all truly great artists, he was somehow able to reach into himself & produce a superhuman final year trilogy of works which are so fantastic that they alone, I submit, would have ensured his place among the immortals.<P>There is just so much marvellous Schubert music. The glorious late string quartets, the greatest-ever collection of 4-hand piano works & dances, the awesome song cycles, the famous chamber works: the Trout quintet, the Octet, D.803, the piano trios with, again, their expanded form, & greatest of all, & in all chamber music, possibly THE greatest of all, the Quintet, D.956. And there is so much more.<P>All the undoubtedly great music aside, my ultimate valuation of Schubert, the Artist is based on knowing that, of all the great composers, his was the most wretched life, & even as he approached death`s door, he was able, due to some kind of inner strength, courage, & indomitable spirit (again, shades of Beethoven), to produce music of almost painful beauty. As I read recently: "Through all of the darkness & uncertainty in our knowledge of Schubert, shines his music: the voice of one crying in the wilderness."<P>I look forward to reading the views of others on this subject. <P>