The Business Times

What Beethoven’s Ninth teaches us

Some call it the greatest symphony ever written, and many praise its visionary message.

- By Daniel Barenboim The writer is a pianist and conductor, co-founder of the West-eastern Divan Orchestra and founder of the Barenboim-said Academy in Berlin

LUDWIG van Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony was first performed 200 years ago on May 7 and has since become probably the work most likely to be embraced for political purposes.

It was played at the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin; it was performed in that city again on Christmas 1989 after the fall of the Berlin Wall, when Leonard Bernstein replaced the word “Joy” in the choral finale with “Freedom”; the European Union adopted the symphony’s Ode to Joy theme as its anthem. (These days the Ninth is being played in concert halls worldwide in commemorat­ion of the premiere. The classical music world loves anniversar­ies.)

Beethoven might have been surprised at the political allure of his masterpiec­e.

He was interested in politics, but only because he was deeply interested in humanity. The story goes that he originally wanted to dedicate his Eroica symphony to Napoleon – it was to be called Bonaparte – but he changed his mind after Napoleon abandoned the ideals of the French Revolution and was crowned emperor.

I don’t believe, however, that Beethoven was interested in everyday politics. He was not an activist.

Instead, he was a deeply political man in the broadest sense of the word. He was concerned with moral behaviour and the larger questions of right and wrong affecting all of society. Especially significan­t for him was freedom of thought and of personal expression, which he associated with the rights and responsibi­lities of the individual. He would have had no sympathy with the now widely held view of freedom as essentiall­y economic, necessary for the workings of the markets.

The closest he comes to a political statement in the Ninth is a sentence at the heart of the last movement, in which voices were heard for the first time in a symphony: “All men become brothers.” We understand that now more as an expression of hope than a confident statement, given the many exceptions to the sentiment, including the Jews under the Nazis and members of minorities in many parts of the world. The quantity and scope of the crises facing humankind severely test that hope. We have seen many crises before, but we do not appear to learn any lessons from them.

Creating unity out of contradict­ions

I also see the Ninth in another way. Music on its own does not stand for anything except itself. The greatness of music, and the Ninth Symphony, lies in the richness of its contrasts. Music never just laughs or cries; it always laughs and cries at the same time. Creating unity out of contradict­ions – that is Beethoven for me.

Music, if you study it properly, is a lesson for life. There is much we can learn from Beethoven, who was, of course, one of the strongest personalit­ies in the history of music. He is the master of bringing emotion and intellect together. With Beethoven, you must be able to structure your feelings and feel the structure emotionall­y – a fantastic lesson for life! When we are in love, we lose all sense of discipline. Music doesn’t allow for that.

But music means different things to different people and sometimes even different things to the same person at different moments. It might be poetic, philosophi­cal, sensual or mathematic­al, but it must have something to do with the soul.

Therefore, it is metaphysic­al – but the means of expression is purely and exclusivel­y physical: sound. It is precisely this permanent coexistenc­e of metaphysic­al message through physical means that is the strength of music. It is also the reason that when we try to describe music with words, all we can do is articulate our reactions to it, and not grasp music itself.

The Ninth Symphony is one of the most important artworks in Western culture. Some experts call it the greatest symphony ever written, and many commentato­rs praise its visionary message. It is also one of the most revolution­ary works by a composer mainly defined by the revolution­ary nature of his

With Beethoven, you must be able to structure your feelings and feel the structure emotionall­y – a fantastic lesson for life!

works. Beethoven freed music from prevailing convention­s of harmony and structure. Sometimes I feel in his late works a will to break all signs of continuity.

The Italian philosophe­r Antonio Gramsci said a wonderful thing in 1929, when the Benito Mussolini had Italy under his thumb. “My mind is pessimisti­c, but my will is optimistic,” he wrote to a friend from prison. I think he meant that as long as we are alive, we have hope. I try to take Gramsci’s words to heart still today, even if not always successful­ly.

By all accounts, Beethoven was courageous, and I find courage an essential quality for the understand­ing, let alone the performanc­e, of the Ninth. One could paraphrase much of the work of Beethoven in the spirit of Gramsci by saying that suffering is inevitable, but the courage to overcome it renders life worth living.

 ?? PHOTO: AFP ?? Beethoven's tombstone at Vienna’s Central cemetery. Austria celebrated the 200th anniversar­y of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, which had its world premiere on May 7, 1824, at the Karntnerto­rtheater in Vienna.
PHOTO: AFP Beethoven's tombstone at Vienna’s Central cemetery. Austria celebrated the 200th anniversar­y of Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony, which had its world premiere on May 7, 1824, at the Karntnerto­rtheater in Vienna.

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