Los Angeles Times

Happy birthday to Beethoven!

Beethoven’s birthday has spawned a bounty of music and books. Here are the best presents.

- MARK SWED MUSIC CRITIC

Celebrate 250 years of the German composer with a bundle of new recordings, books.

On Wednesday, Ludwig van Beethoven’s birthday will be celebrated for the 250th time. I assume his abusive, alcoholic father wasn’t too plastered to have had baby Beethoven parties, and the composer is one who has never gone out of fashion.

Indeed, Beethoven has remained such a dominant, adversity- overcoming odeto- joy- ster that even a pandemic hasn’t been able to blow out 250 brightly burning birthday candles lighting up a darkened world. The German city of Bonn, Beethoven’s birthplace, has faddishly branded the year BTHVN2020 and provided an online storehouse for events and tidbits the world over. Whom are they kidding? The so- called Beethoven year began in 2019, and BTHVN2020 has just officially extended celebratio­ns to September 2021.

That’s a lot of Beethoven cake to clog the arteries. Lest BTHVN250 come to stand for a classical music disease, we need new and healthful options. I’ll take the heirloom sourdough slice with organic blueberrie­s and raw, sprouted, unsalted almonds on top, please. Hold the whipped cream. Always hold the whipped cream.

This is not an unreasonab­le request, however unrelentin­g the Beethoven glut. The COVID- 19 pandemic may have forced the cancellati­on of thousands of Beethoven performanc­es around the world, but they have been replaced by thousands of performanc­es Zoomed from musicians’ homes.

Masks, social distancing, plastic barriers and audience restrictio­ns have not prevented orchestras from performing live or streaming a composer whose music all but forces us to aspire to higher ideals, providing the wrenching road map from dark to light. No dike has been erected to stop the f lood of new Beethoven recordings, books and articles.

The result may be far too much Beethoven, but that is nothing new. Since the bicentenni­al surge 50 years ago, we’ve seen efforts to deal with the dulling effect from Beethoven overkill.

Fifteen years ago, EsaPekka Salonen began a “Beethoven Unbound” series with the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic in which he paired newly commission­ed and recent pieces with the nine Beethoven symphonies. Last month, Salonen had been scheduled to conduct the Beethoven ballet “Creatures of Prometheus” with the L. A. Phil, but COVID- 19 canceled those plans. That concert was to have included a piece by Swedish composer Anders Hillborg, whose “Beethoven Unbound” score, “Eleven Gates,” created a sensation and was recorded in 2006.

Salonen wasn’t the only one. Around the same time, Christoph Eschenbach did something similar with the Philadelph­ia Orchestra. Now, everyone does it. A Philadelph­ia Orchestra stream this Beethoven birthday week will precede a Beethoven piano concerto with Missy Mazzoli’s terrific “Ecstatic Science,” while the National Orchestra of Spain this week has positioned, before Beethoven’s Fifth, Mazzoli’s celestial “Sinfonia ( for Orbiting Spheres),” which the L. A. Phil commission­ed in 2013. Gustavo Dudamel ended the latest L. A. Phil Sound/ Stage program by following the exuberant last movement of Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony with the exuberant ending of Gabriela Ortiz’s “Corpórea.” The shoe fit.

Musicians easily get carried away when it comes to Beethoven. Norwegian composer Leif Inge’s “9 Beet Stretch” turned a radically slowed- down Ninth Symphony into 24 hours of sonic taffy. Venturesom­e German pianist Susanne Kessel commission­ed 250 short piano pieces from all sorts of composers for the big birthday.

Gidon Kremer has been a violinist on the Beethoven case longer than most. In 1981, he made a startling recording of the Violin Concerto with Neville Marriner conducting the Academy of St Martin in the Fields. It begins as a probing, superbly played, seemingly convention­al performanc­e, until it reaches an avantgarde new cadenza by Alfred Schnittke acts like a foreign agent determined to hack the whole concerto. From that moment on, you listen differentl­y.

Kremer’s latest recording, “Searching for Beethoven,” with cellist Mario Brunello and the Kremerata Baltica, begins with Brunello’s arrangemen­t of “Muss es Sein? Es muss sein!,” a 1970s song by anarchisti­c French chanteur Léo Ferré. A Beethoven fanatic, the mesmeric Ferré liked to conduct Beethoven by walking up and the down the middle of an orchestra, pounding his f ists in the air and reciting, angry, erotic, surreal poetry.

Beethoven wrote the question “Muss es sein?” ( Must it be?) and the answer, “Es muss sein!” ( It must be!), above a three-note f igure with which he ended his last completed work, the String Quartet No. 16, Opus 135. Amid Brunello’s soulful cello and ensemble arrangemen­t of Ferré’s hard- hitting song, a recording of the poet’s voice lashes out with a cri de coeur from his protest song: “Ludwig! Ludwig! Are you deaf ?” “Music is dying, Madam!” “We want music in the street! Beethoven Strasse! It must be. It will be!”

There is also something about Pierre Boulez being a shopkeeper. This becomes prelude to a string orchestra arrangemen­t vibrantly conducted by Brunello, who brings an insightful ( and inciteful) light to this last Beethoven enigma.

The rest of the generous recording contains Giovanni Sollima’s “Note Sconte” for string orchestra, in which the cellist composer sifts through Beethoven fragments of the String Quartet No. 14, Opus 131. That is followed by genuinely searching string orchestra performanc­e of the profound quartet led and conducted by Kremer, each phrase a discovery. If I were to get but one new birthday- boy Beethoven recording, this would be it.

Two big pieces written in 1970 meant to catapult the Beethoven bicentenni­al into the European avant garde were “Ludwig van” by the the quixotic Mauricio Kagel and “Opus 1970” by composer- seer Karlheinz Stockhause­n. It so happens that Gerald Barry studied with both. Kagel described the antic Irish composer as someone who didn’t drink but who composed as though he were drunk.

So true. There is no more wigged- out Beethoveni­an than Barry. His British colleague Thomas Adès, who instigated the premieres of two fantastica­l Barry operas for the L. A. Phil, is recording a set of Beethoven symphonies interspers­ed with pieces by Barry. In “Beethoven,” Barry sets the texts of Beethoven’s famous love letters to his “Immortal Beloved” for baritone and chamber ensemble, and it sounds like Ludwig inhaling laughing gas.

It is hard not to laugh out loud at times, and all the harder not to feel a little guilty in so doing. The more bizarre the piece becomes, the more touching. I hope someone can explain to me why it is that this extraordin­ary score brings Beethoven to life in a way few portraits of the composer in any medium have.

Adès’ bracing Beethoven performanc­es with the Britten Sinfonia, for all their illuminati­ng clarity, have a wit and wonder to them, as though Barry had sneaked in an illegal substance or two. Adès is thus far up to the Sixth Symphony (“Pastoral”), and he has competitio­n in f inding novel stimulants in Beethoven’s majestic nature ode. Martha Argerich and Theodosia Ntokou’s new recording of an arrangemen­t for piano four hands refreshes as though the “Pastorale” were bathed in a crystallin­e mountain stream.

For the inquisitiv­e Beethoveni­an, two books have come along this year that reveal the composer in an enlighteni­ng contempora­ry light. UCLA Beethoven scholar William Kinderman’s study, “Beethoven: A Political Artist in Revolution­ary Times,” shows how the great composer maneuvered in times much like our Trumpian own. Paul Griffiths’ novel “Mr. Beethoven” puts the composer in modern- day Boston, actually maneuverin­g in our time.

Hardly a page goes by in either of these superbly written and complement­ary books without offering an unexpected reason to care about Beethoven.

 ?? David Hockney Apple ?? FROM ONE ARTIST TO ANOTHER: David Hockney created this art of birthday boy Beethoven on an iPad.
David Hockney Apple FROM ONE ARTIST TO ANOTHER: David Hockney created this art of birthday boy Beethoven on an iPad.

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