Solomon PDF
Solomon PDF
Solomon PDF
During her sojourn in Vienna in the years 1809 to 1812 Frau Antonie Brentano
was often ailing for weeks at a time, suffering to such an extent that she with
drew to her room, where she remained by herself, unfit to see anybody. On
such occasions Beethoven was regularly in attendance; he came in, seated him
self without any further ado at a piano in her antechamber and improvised;
when he had "said everything and given solace" to the sufferer in his own
language, he left as he had come, without taking notice of anybody else.2
The passing of half a century had not affected Frau Brentano's memory.
A letter to her sister-in-law Bettina, written in early 1811, described these
same events at the very time that they were taking place:
Beethoven has become for me one of the dearest [liebsten] human beings. . . .
His whole nature is simple, noble, good-natured, and his tender-heartedness
229
230 LATE BEETHOVEN
would grace the most delicate woman. It speaks in his favor that few know
him, and even fewer understand him. He visits me often, almost daily, and
then he plays spontaneously because he has an urgent need to alleviate suffer
ing, and he feels that he is able to do so with his heavenly sounds. . . . That
there is such power in music I hadn't yet known until Beethoven informed
me of it.3
A related and in some ways even more poignant story is told in connec
tion with Beethoven's former student, the pianist Dorothea von Ertmann
nee Graumann, who was one of the leading exponents of his keyboard music,
and to whom he dedicated the Piano Sonata in A, op. 101, written in 1816
and published the following year. After the death of her three-year-old son,
in 1804, she found herself unable to weep—and she was additionally trou
bled by Beethoven's failure to offer his condolences in person. Some years
afterward she told her niece, "I could not understand at all why he did not
visit me after the death of my beloved only child."4 Apparendy he had some
reluctance to come to her house, and finally—reportedly at her husband's
urging—he invited her to his own home. According to Felix Mendelssohn's
account, when Beethoven sat down at the keyboard, his only words to his
bereaved friend were "We will now talk to each other in tones." He played
for more than an hour until, as she said, "he told me everything, and in the
end even brought me comfort [Er sagte mir alles, und gab mir auch zuletzt den
Trost]."5 According to another account of the incident, recalled by the noted
actress Antonie Adamberger, he uttered not a single word of greeting, but
sat down at the piano and played for Ertmann until at last "she began to sob
and thus her grief found both expression and relief."6 "I felt as if I were lis
tening to choirs of angels celebrating the entrance of my poor child into
the world of light," Ertmann told her niece. "When he had finished, he
pressed my hand sadly and went away as silently as he had come."7
A parallel anecdote from the life of Franz Schubert indicates that Beetho
ven was not the only composer who invested his music with such unusual
powers. In March 1825 Schubert participated in a psychotherapeutic treat
ment of a young woman, Louise Mora, while she was being treated under
hypnotism by the painter Ludwig Schnorr von Carolsfeld, who moonlighted
as a mesmerist healer, sometimes in collaboration with Romantic writer
Friedrich Schlegel.8 Schubert was called in because the patient persisted in
awakening from a sleep induced by hypnosis.
THE HEALING POWER OF MUSIC 23 I
EXAMPLE 12.i. Schubert, DeutscherTanz in B-flat, op. 33, no. 7, D783, mm. 1—4.
1 ii NH f
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LJ—£—£— 'j1
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Schnorr kept detailed minutes of the treatment; the entry for 20 March
1825 reads:
In the evening at 7:30 the patient was hypnotized. She fell asleep, was placed
in her armchair, and awoke soon thereafter. After the sounding [Beruhrung]
of several chords from no. 7 of Schubert's German Dances she fell asleep [see
ex. 12.1]. At a quarter to eight, after again [hearing] the above mentioned
Deutscher Tanz, she again fell asleep.
Four days later, the treatment continued, as recorded in the minutes for 24
March:
In the evening at 7:25 the sfomnambulist] fell into a trance when Herr Schubert
played the same German Dance that regularly produced that effect upon her.
She was awakened in a clairvoyant state, rubbed her eyes etc., when, at 7:45,
Herr Sfchubert] sang and accompanied himself in a bed that was in the same
key [B-flat] as that German Dance; then the patient fell into a trance and then
a sleep that lasted until the bed ended, at which point she was mesmerized
(magnetized). Around 8:00 a renewed trance, because Herr S[chubert] played
that familiar German Dance once again and said, "Don't wake up! [Nicht
wecken!]" As she continued sleeping, he played still other things that she said
she found pleasing. She was so taken with one of the German dances that the
m[esmerist] once had to awaken her through stroking and found it necessary
to stay with her.
Among other pieces that were played was also "Der Wanderer," composed
by himself, which similarly made a deep impression on her. She wanted to be
awakened, which was done in the usual way by stroking. . . . On this musi
cal occasion it was still very striking to remark the various ways in which the
tones and chords could affect a sfomnambulist]. Several, which were very mov
ing, produced the most wonderful motions and contortions of her body.9
232 LATE BEETHOVEN
II
These unusual episodes from the fives of Beethoven and Schubert are tes
timony to some of the ways in which music can heal, or, more exactly, can
be put in the service of healing. But healing in music is not always indi
vidual, personal, reducible to a telling anecdote; often it touches on more
wide-reaching issues of human suffering, injustice, and loss. Thus, for ex
ample, the closing chorales of many Bach cantatas crown narratives of sin
or suffering, reaffirming shared beliefs, restoring sinners to grace, enfold
ing worshipers in the embrace of the congregation. Similarly, the peripatetic
chorale melody in the St. Matthew Passion is a leitmotif of healing by way
of reassurance, always keeping in sight the resurrection that follows Christ's
crucifixion.13
THE HEALING POWER OF MUSIC 235
EXAMPLE 12.3. String Quartet in A minor, op. 132, Molto adagio: "Heiliger Dankgesang," mm. 1-6.
The biblical echoes of Beethoven's heading, with its appeal to the Deity, are
not far from the surface; the most famous of these is the account of David's
healing of Saul's melancholia:14
236 LATE BEETHOVEN
And it came to pass, when the evil spirit from God was upon Saul, that David
took an harp, and played with his hand; so Saul was refreshed and was well,
and the evil spirit departed from him.
(1 Samuel 16.23)
EXAMPLE 12.4. String Quartet in A minor, op. 132, Molto adagio: "Neue Kraft fiihlend," mm.
31-34-
EXAMPLE 12.5. Symphony No. 9 in D minor, op. 125, finale, mm. 92-101.
Ill
EXAMPLE 12.6. Piano Sonata in A-flat, op. no, Fuga: Allegro ma non troppo, mm. 116-118.
(Ermattet, klaeend)
EXAMPLE 12.7. Piano Sonata in A-flat, op. no, Fuga: Allegro ma non troppo, mm. 136/37-43.
L'istesso tempo della Fuga
Poi a poi di nuovo vivtntc
eloquent expressive instructions in his native language, used in the fiagal finale
of the Sonata in A-flat, op. 110, to signal the rematerialization of the Ada
gio's grief-ridden "Klagende Lied" ("Arioso dolente," "Song of Lament";
ex. 12.6). It takes all of Beethoven's imaginative powers to overcome this
grief. The sonata's culminating Fugue returns, headed "Little by little re
viving to life [Nach und nach wieder aujiebend]," marking an emergence from
deep confinement, a resumption of existence (ex. 12.7).
Finally, the Cavatina of the String Quartet in B-flat, op. 130, speaks of
grief but also of consolation. It was perhaps the only work about which
Beethoven confessed that it brought him to tears: "He really wrote it with
tears of sadness in his eyes," reported Karl Holz, "and admitted to me that
no other work of his own had ever made such an impression on him, and
that even the remembered feelings aroused by this piece always cost him new
tears."17 This represents a notable softening of Beethoven's customary sto
icism, for he almost always avoided an appeal to tearful sentiments in his
music, preferring, like the French Revolution's composers, to convert grief
into public display and exhortation, as in the Andante of the Fifth Sym
phony, or into ceremonial ritual, as in the Marcia funebre of the Eroica Sym
phony and the Allegretto of the Seventh Symphony. In the finale of the Ninth
Symphony, the Adagio is explicidy rejected as "too tender" (zu zdrtlfich]),
240 LATE BEETHOVEN
EXAMPLE 12.8. String Quartet in B-flat, op. 130, Cavatina ("Beklemmt"), mm. 40-44.
in the words Beethoven used in his sketches to describe its first theme.18
Here, however, in the penultimate movement of the B-flat String Quartet,
he openly permitted himself to acknowledge music's power to represent
depths of suffering and of fear. The contrasting section of the Cavatina,
marked Beklemmt, plunges into darkness, melancholia, and dread. And by
that unprecedented expression indication, taken from his mother tongue and
carrying an almost tangibly oppressive physicality, Beethoven poses the most
difficult questions—how to endure pain of this intensity, how to awaken
from a burdensome nightmare, how to breathe freely again (ex. 12.8). And
the fact is that Beethoven found two satisfactory answers to those questions
in the alternative closing movements of the B-flat String Quartet that he
left for posterity to puzzle over.
The opening of the Grosse Fuge appropriately is called "Overtura" be
cause it is a prefiguration of the action, a pot-pourri of working materials,
and thus literally a reversion to a state prior to the commencement of ac-
THE HEALING POWER OF MUSIC 24I
29. For a list of exemplary papers on the finale's form, by Ernest Sanders, Michael C.
Tusa, James Webster, and William Kinderman, see Solomon, Beethoven, p. 507.
30. Whatever its suspicions of Beethoven, the imperial court had not forgotten his pa
triotic and uncharacteristically obsequious Congress of Vienna works—Der Glorreiche
Augenblick, op. 136, Germania, WoO 94, and the "Chorus to the Allied Princes," WoO
95, which begins "You wise founders of fortunate states [Ihr weisen Griinder gliicklicher
Staaten]"—and it might well have viewed the Ninth Symphony as the latest of Beetho
ven's pikes d'occasion, a view that would not be contradicted by the subsequent dedi
cation of the symphony to Friedrich Wilhelm III of Prussia. In October 1822, only
seventeen months before the premiere of the Ninth Symphony, Beethoven's music for
the festspiel Die IVeihe des Houses was performed to honor Emperor Franz's nameday as
well as to celebrate the opening of the Josephstadt Theater.
31. Bertolt Brecht, Aufstieg und Fall der Stadt Mahagonny, vol. 2 of Bertolt Brecht: Werke,
Berliner und Franfurter Ausgabe, ed. Werner Hecht et al., 30 vols. (Berlin and Weimar:
Aufbau; and Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1988—), pp. 349-50.
1. Jahn, letter to G. Hartenstein, 12 December 1852, in Otto Jahn in seinen Briefen. Mit
einem Bilde seines Lebens von Adolf Michaelis, ed. Eugen Petersen (Leipzig and Berlin: Teub-
ner, 1913), p. 83.
2. Otto Jahn, "Ein Brief Beethovens," Die Grenzboten: Zeitschrift fur Politik und Lite-
ratur 26, no. 2 (1867): 100-105, at p. 101; see also the extract published inThayer-
Deiters-Riemann, vol. 3, pp. 214—15, Thayer-Krehbiel, vol. 2, p. 179.
3. Letter from Antonie Brentano to Bettina Brentano, Vienna, 11 March 1811
(Sammlung Varnhagen, Biblioteka Jagielloriska, Krakow), published by Klaus Martin
Kopitz, "Antonie Brentano in Wien (1809-1812): Neue Quellen zur Problematik 'Un-
sterbliche Geliebte,'" in Bonner Beethoven-Studien, vol. 2, ed. Sieghard Brandenburg and
Ernst Herttrich (Bonn: Beethoven-Haus, 2001), pp. 115-44, at p. 128.
4. Mathilde Marchesi, Marquise de la Rajata de Castrone, Aus meinem Leben (Diissel-
dorf: Felix Bagel, n.d. [ca. 1888]), p. 12, quoted by A. C. Kalischer, Beethoven und seine
Zeitgenossen, 4 vols. (Berlin: Schuster & Loeffler, n.d. [1908—10]), vol. 3, Beethovens
Frauenkreis, part 2, p. 125, trans. George Marek, Beethoven: Biography of a Genius (New
York: Funk & Wagnalls, 1969), p. 291. See also Mathilde de Castrone Marchesi, Erin-
nerungen aus meinem Leben (Vienna: Carl Gerolds Sohn, 1877), p. 7. Ertmann's son, Franz
Carl, died 19 March 1804, according to information in Viennese death registers located
and generously communicated by Klaus Martin Kopitz.
5. Letter to Mendelssohn's mother, 14 July 1831, in Felix Mendelssohn-Bartholdy,
Reisebriefe aus den fahren 1830 bis 1832, 4th ed., edited by Paul Mendelssohn Bartholdy
(Leipzig: H. Mendelssohn, 1862), p. 195.See alsoThayer-Deiters-Riemann, vol. 2, p. 415,
trans. Thayer-Forbes, p. 413. Antonie Brentano's account echoes the latter phrase, "said
NOTES TO PAGES 230-36 299
everything and brought comfort [altes gesagt und Trost gegeben hatte]," possibly suggest
ing that either she or Jahn was familiar with Mendelssohn's letter.
6. Adamberger, quoted by Thayer-Deiters-Riemann, vol. 3, p. 583.
7. de Castrone, Erinnerungen aus meinem Leben, p. 12, trans. Marek, Beethoven, p. 291.
8. See Lisa Feurzeig, "Heroines in Perversity: Marie Schmith, Animal Magnetism, and
the Schubert Circle," 19th-century Music 21 (1997): 223-43; Harry Goldschmidt, "Schu
bert und kein Ende," Beitrdge zur Musikwissenschaft 25 (1983): 288-92.
9. Goldschmidt, "Schubert und kein Ende," pp. 290-91.
10. Goldschmidt favors the song paraphrase in the middle of the "Wanderer" Fanta
sia, ibid., p. 291.
11. Feurzeig, "Heroines in Perversity," pp. 231-32.
12. Phyllis Greenacre, Emotional Growth: Psychoanalytic Studies of the Gifted and a Great
Variety of Other Individuals, 2 vols. (New York: International Universities Press, 1971),
vol. 2, p. 628. Leonard Meyer reached a similar conclusion via a different route, hold
ing that "a patient's belief in the efficacy and power of music to heal may be a significant
element in the success of music therapy." Leonard B. Meyer, "Learning, Belief, and Mu
sic Therapy," Music Therapy 5 (1955): 27-35, at p. 33; see also Meyer, Emotion and Mean
ing in Music (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1956), pp. 73-75.
13. For "the image of Bach as healer" see Walter Frisch, "Bach, Brahms, and the Emer
gence of Musical Modernism," Bach Perspectives, vol. 3, ed. Michael Marissen (Lincoln
and London: University of Nebraska Press, 1998), pp. 127-29.
14. We are reminded also of the dying Hezekiah, "sick unto death," who in despair
had "turned his face towards the wall": but his prayer was answered, his health restored,
his days lengthened by fifteen years, and his people delivered from the hand of the As
syrians (2 Kings 20.1-6, Isaiah 38.1-6). The Lutheran composer Johann Kuhnau told
the story in one of his Biblical sonatas for keyboard, titled "Hezekiah, mortally ill and
then restored."
15. Zarlino, Institutioni harmoniche (Venice, 155 8), p. 3 03, quoted by Warren Kirkendale,
"New Roads to Old Ideas in Beethoven's Missa Solemnis," Musical Quarterly 56 (1970):
677. Kirkendale records several references to Zarlino in Beethoven's conversation books
for December 1819, Konversationshefte, vol. 1, p. 108 (Heft 3, 52r) and p. 196 (Heft 6,
3iv).
16. Tovey found a close analogy in the opening of the second half of the Goldberg
Variations: "Bach's sixteenth variation bursts forth, after the sombre tones of the fifteenth,
with a 'feeling of renewed strength,' not unworthy to be regarded as a foreshadowing"
of the Heiliger Dankgesang. Tovey, Essays in Musical Analysis: Chamber Music (London:
Oxford University Press, 1945), p. 56. The healing powers of music were a serious topic
in music journals of Beethoven's time; see, for example, the lengthy article by Dr. F. W.
Weber, "Von dem Einflufie der Musik auf den menschlichen Korper und ihrer medi-
cinischen Anwendung," AmZ 14 (26 May 1802), cols. 561-69 (2 June 1802), cols.
577-89 (9 June 1802), cols. 593-99 (15 June 1802), cols. 609-17; see also the article