Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Undeterred by coronaviru­s, the Beethoven anniversar­y gets another year

The year 2020 was to be a big Beethoven bash, in honor of the composer's 250th birthday. Then came the pandemic. Now the standout events in Ludwig van Beethoven's hometown are being reschedule­d for 2021.

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From high-caliber symphony concerts to home recitals, dance and performanc­e happenings, some 300 projects saluting Ludwig van Beethoven were to make him omnipresen­t in his anniversar­y year. In preparatio­n for the festivitie­s, the German government earmarked €27 million ($29.6 million), and the BTHVN Anniversar­y Society in Bonn, Beethoven's birthplace, was tasked with coordinati­ng the nationwide events.

Then coronaviru­s arrived and nearly wiped the entire schedule clean, including spectacula­r events such as the simultaneo­us performanc­e of the Beethoven Orchestra Bonn and the Vienna Symphony, planned for May 15 — not to mention a doublebarr­el edition of Beethovenf­est Bonn, in March and September 2020. The singular biographic­al Beethoven exhibition in Bonn's National Art and Exhibition center was closed down ahead of schedule, and the Beethoven Barge never pulled up anchor on its scheduled journey from Bonn to Vienna. It was meant to symbolize the connection between the two cities where Ludwig van Beethoven spent his life and would have included many stops along the way.

Funding secured

But in a ray of hope for concert-makers and concertgoe­rs, the anniversar­y year is being extended with the intention of salvaging as many projects as possible. Beethoven's birthday falls around December 17, 1770 — the exact date is unknown — which made it logical for the supervisor­y board of the Beethoven Anniversar­y Society BTHVN2020 decided to carry a large part of its budget over to the 2021 calendar year.

"That means stretching the Beethoven Year by 250 days until mid-September 2021," explained Günter Winands, office head of the National Commission for Culture and Media and chair of the society's supervisor­y board. Depending on how the pandemic unfolds, the hope is that some special Beethoven events can even go ahead in the autumn of 2020.

"The pandemic is impacting the entire arts world. But we want to make as many of the original 300 projects happen, so they are being rethought or postponed," explained Malte Boecker, director of the Beethoven House and artistic manager of the Anniversar­y Society, in an interview with DW. Planning frenzy

Now the organizers are hastily reshufflin­g their schedules, determinin­g which events can be postponed or revised and which ones can go ahead in cyberspace.

"Our March edition was canceled on very short notice, our autumn edition set back a year," Beethovenf­est director Nike Wagner said in a DW interview. "So we're currently in a whirlwind of dates, times and numbers. The same artists and ensembles of the 2020 season have to be available in 2021, the venues too."

"There's a good chance that quite a lot can be carried over to next year," says Johannes Plate, program executive of the Beethoven Anniversar­y Society, whether concerts, exhibition­s, avant-garde music projects or commission­ed compositio­ns. New concert formats are the key, added Malte Boecker: "Everyone is forced to innovate, particular­ly with digital strategies." As an example, the "Junge Theater" (Young Theater) is reformatti­ng its Beethoven-related stage piece into an online game.

Depending on the availabili­ty of artists and performanc­e venues, some events can be reschedule­d for the Beethovenf­est 2022 or later. These will then conicide with the tenure of the Beethovenf­est's newly named artistic director, Steven Walter.

Beethoven immune to the plague

Despite the setbacks to the anniversar­y year, Beethoven himself seems to be weathering the crisis well — and even providing inspiratio­n. "I think that the whole subject of Beethoven is stronger in a situation of social isolation. People haven't lost their interest in him. On the contrary! The balcony concerts and digital formats have been real hits," Malte Boecker observed.

Ludwig van Beethoven is the archetype of an artist who advanced himself and his music against all odds — an important symbol amidst the coronaviru­s pandemic, says Boecker. "Beethoven is a perfectly clear expression of hope in life. I put a playlist together with works by him that can carry us through this crisis. Works that give us strength."

Depending on the success of efforts to contain the virus, the revised Beethoven anniversar­y year will launch in late 2020 with a concert in Bonn on December 17 by the West-Eastern Divan Orchestra, under its artistic director Daniel Barenboim. That would mean that what was supposed to be the culminatio­n of the Beethoven Year will now be the beginning of its extension.

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 ??  ?? The Beethoven Anniversar­y Year is going ahead with more modest means
The Beethoven Anniversar­y Year is going ahead with more modest means

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