Symphony No. 3 (Beethoven)
The Symphony No. 3 in E♭ major, Op. 55, (also Italian Sinfonia Eroica, Heroic Symphony) is a symphony in four movements by Ludwig van Beethoven.
Symphony No. 3 in E♭ major | |
---|---|
Sinfonia Eroica | |
by Ludwig van Beethoven | |
Beethoven's title page which shows his erasure of dedication of the work to Napoleon | |
Catalogue | Op. 55 |
Composed | 1802 | –1804
Performed | 7 April 1805 : Vienna |
Movements | Four |
One of the composer's most celebrated works, the Eroica symphony is a large-scale composition that marked the beginning of Beethoven's creative middle period.[1][2]
Composed mainly in 1803–1804, the work was instrumental in breaking the boundaries of form, length, harmony, and perceived emotional and possibly cultural content. It has therefore widely been considered an important landmark in the transition between the Classical and the Romantic era. It is also often considered to be the first Romantic symphony.
Instrumentation
Symphony No. 3 is scored for two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets in B♭, two bassoons, three horns (the 1st in E♭, C, and F; the 2nd in E♭ and C; and the 3rd in E♭), two trumpets in E♭ and C, timpani in E♭ and B♭ (in the 1st, 3rd, and 4th movements) and in C and G (in the 2nd movement), and strings.
Form
The work is in four movements:
- Allegro con brio (12–18 min.) (E♭ major)
- Marcia funebre: Adagio assai (14–18 min.) (C minor)
- Scherzo: Allegro vivace (5–6 min.) (E♭ major)
- Finale: Allegro molto (10–14 min.) (E♭ major)
Depending upon the conductor's style and observation of the exposition repeat in the first movement, the performance time is between 41 and 56 minutes.
I. Allegro con brio
The first movement, in 3
4 time, is in sonata form, with typical performances between 12 and 18 minutes long depending on interpretation and whether the exposition repeat is played. Unlike the longer introductions in Beethoven's first two symphonies, the movement opens with two large E♭ major chords, played by the whole orchestra, that establish the tonality of the movement.
The conductor Kenneth Woods has noted that the opening movement of Eroica has been inspired by and modeled on Mozart's Symphony No. 39, and shares many attributes of that earlier symphony which predates this one by a decade and a half.[3]
Exposition
Main theme of the first movement
The exposition begins with the cellos introducing the first theme. By the fifth bar of the melody (m. 7), a chromatic note (C♯) is introduced, thus introducing the harmonic tension of the work. The melody is finished by the first violins, with a syncopated series of Gs (which forms a tritone with C♯ of the cellos). The first theme is then played again by the various instruments.
The modulation to the dominant key of B♭ appears early (mm. 42–44).[4]:140 In the traditional analysis, this is followed by three (or in some views, two) transitional subjects that significantly expand the scale of the exposition – a lyrical downward motif (mm. 45–56), an upward scale motif (mm. 57–64), and a section beginning with rapid downward patterns in the violins (mm. 65–82).[lower-alpha 1] This eventually leads to a lyrical second theme (m. 83) that arrives "unusually late".[6]:61 After this, the second half of the theme eventually builds to a loud melody (m. 109) that draws upon the earlier downward motif (m. 113). The climactic moment of the exposition arrives when the music is interrupted by six consecutive sforzando chords (mm. 128–131). Later, and following the concluding chords of the exposition (mm. 144–148), the main theme returns in a brief codetta (m. 148) that transitions into the repeat / development.
An alternative analysis holds that the second theme begins earlier at m. 45 with the downward motif. In this view, the traditional harmonic progression of the exposition ends at m. 82, with the new lyrical theme at m. 83 beginning an extension. This pattern would be consistent with that found later in the development, in which the climactic moment leads to a new lyrical theme that launches an extended section. Moreover, the downward motif theme (m. 45) is developed significantly in the next section while the lyrical theme (m. 83) does not appear.[7]:97 Commenters have also observed that the sonata form and orchestration transitions would be fully preserved by cutting the second half of the exposition (m. 83–143).[4]:140 However, others have observed that form and orchestration would also be fully preserved if the second and third transitional passages were cut instead (mm. 57–82),[5] consistent with the traditional analysis.
Development
The development section (m. 154),[lower-alpha 2] like the rest of the movement, is characterized by harmonic and rhythmic tension from dissonant chords and long passages of syncopated rhythm. Following various thematic explorations and counterpoint, the music eventually breaks into a 32-bar passage (mm. 248–279) of sforzando chords including both 2-beat and 3-beat downward patterns, culminating in crashing dissonant forte chords (mm. 276–279). Commenters have stated that this "outburst of rage ... forms the kernel of the whole movement", and Beethoven reportedly got out in his beat when conducting the orchestra in Christmas 1804, forcing the confused players to stop and go back.[6]:64 & footnote
Rather than leading to the recapitulation at this point, a new theme in E minor is then introduced instead (mm. 284). This eventually leads to a near-doubling of the development's length, in like proportion to the exposition.[4]:140
At the end of the development, one horn famously appears to come in early with the main theme in E♭ (mm. 394–395), while the strings continue playing the dominant chord. In the 19th century, this was thought to be a mistake; some conductors assumed the horn notes were written in the tenor clef (B♭–D–B♭–F) while others altered the second violin harmony to G (chord of the tonic), an error that eventually appeared in an early printed version.[6]:66 & footnote However, Beethoven's secretary, Ferdinand Ries, shared this anecdote about that horn entrance:
The first rehearsal of the symphony was terrible, but the hornist did, in fact, come in on cue. I was standing next to Beethoven and, believing that he had made a wrong entrance, I said, "That damned hornist! Can't he count? It sounds frightfully wrong." I believe I was in danger of getting my ears boxed. Beethoven did not forgive me for a long time.[8]
Recapitulation and coda
The recapitulation section features a sudden excursion to F major early on[4]:141 before eventually returning to a more typical form. The movement concludes in a long coda that reintroduces the new theme first presented in the development section.
II. Marcia funebre. Adagio assai
The second movement is a funeral march in the ternary form (A–B–A) that is typical of 18th-century funeral marches,[9]:1071 albeit one that is "large and amply developed" and in which the principal theme has the functions of a refrain as in rondo form.[10]:70 Musically, the thematic solemnity of the second movement has lent itself for use as a funeral march, proper. The movement is between 14 and 18 minutes long.
The opening A-section in C minor begins with the march theme in the strings, then in the winds. A second theme (m. 17) in the relative major (E♭) quickly returns to minor tonality, and these materials are developed throughout the rest of the section.[6]:72 This eventually gives way to a brief B-section in C major (m. 69) "for what may be called the Trio of the March",[6]:72 which Beethoven unusually calls attention to by marking "Maggiore" (major) in the score.
At this point, the traditional "bounds of ceremonial propriety" would normally indicate a da capo return to the A theme.[7]:106 However, the first theme in C minor (m. 105) begins modulating in the sixth bar (m. 110), leading to a fugue in F minor (m. 114) based on an inversion of the original second theme. The first theme reappears briefly in G minor in the strings (m. 154), followed by a stormy development passage ("a shocking fortissimo plunge").[10]:70[9]:1072 A full re-statement of the first theme in the original key then begins in the oboe (m. 173).
The coda (m. 209) begins with a marching motif in the strings that was earlier heard in the major section (at mm. 78, 100)[6]:72 and eventually ends with a final soft statement of the main theme (m. 238) that "crumbles into short phrases interspersed with silences".[10]:70
III. Scherzo. Allegro vivace - Trio
The third movement is a lively scherzo with trio in rapid 3
4 time. It is between 5 and 6 minutes long.
The A theme of the outer scherzo section appears pianissimo in the dominant key of B♭ (mm. 7, 21), then piano in the secondary dominant key of F which is when the B part of the outer scherzo is heard (m. 41). This is followed by a pianissimo restart in B♭ (m. 73), which is when the A theme is heard again, leading to a full fortissimo statement in the tonic key of E♭ (m. 93). Later, a downward arpeggio motif with sforzandos on the second beat is played twice in unison, first by the strings (mm. 115–119) and then by the full orchestra (mm. 123–127). This is followed by a syncopated motif characterized by descending fourths (m. 143), leading to the repeat.
The trio section features three horns, the first time this had appeared in the symphonic tradition.[10]:71 The scherzo is then repeated in shortened form,[6]:78 except that very notably the second occurrence of the downward unison motif is changed to duple time (mm. 381–384).[lower-alpha 2] The movement ends with a coda (m. 423) – with Beethoven marking the word in the score which was unusual for him – that quickly builds from pianissimo to fortissimo, encapsulating the pattern of the whole movement.[10]:70
IV. Finale. Allegro molto - Poco Andante - Presto
The fourth movement is a set of ten variations on a theme. It lasts between 10 and 14 minutes. The theme was previously used by Beethoven in earlier compositions and arguably forms the basis for the first three movements of the symphony as well (see Thematic Origins below).
The third variation of the theme of the fourth movement
After a short introduction on the tutti that begins with the mediant chord that transitions to the dominant seventh, the quiet theme, in E-flat major, first appears and then is subjected to a series of ten variations:
Variation 1: The first variation repeats the theme in "arco" while a new accompaniment is introduced. (E-flat major)
Variation 2: The next variation, containing a new triplet accompaniment, leads to: (E-flat major)
Variation 3: Where a new melody is introduced while the theme is still played on the bass. A brief transitional passage leads to: (E-flat major)
Variation 4: In C minor, a fugue that starts quietly and suspensefully on the strings as it builds up to a dramatic and urgent climax. (See Beethoven and C minor.)
Variation 5: The playful fifth variation is in D major, involving a statement of the theme where the bass instruments play the first clause of the first half in a minor mode, before correcting themselves and moving to the major for the second clause. The variation also includes two virtuosic solo passages for the flute which accompany the melodic line. This directly leads to:
Variation 6: A stormy and raging variation in G minor, reminiscent of a gypsy dance.
Variation 7: An incomplete variation, which begins with a simple restatement of the first half of the theme in C major, before an almost immediate switch back to the minor mode in order to bring the piece into:
Variation 8: Another fugue, now it is bright and energized, as this time it is in the tonic (E-flat major) instead of the submediant. It builds up to a climax again; the orchestra pauses on the dominant of the home key, and the theme is further developed in:
Variation 9: At this point, the tempo slows down to Poco Andante, and the piece becomes more serene and tranquil. The theme, first stated by an oboe and then by the strings, here is contemplative and wistful, bringing a greater sense of depth to what has been heard before. During the second half, another triplet accompaniment is introduced in the higher strings, while the melodies, played by the woodwinds, are made of syncopated 16th and 8th notes. (E-flat major)
Variation 10: The final variation, which is when the "full image" of The Eroica is heard. Triumphant and heroic plunges are constantly heard on the tutti, with the triplet accompaniment from the previous variation still present, as the melody from the third variation, now victorious and energized, is heard on the brass. (E-flat major)
The symphony ends with a coda, which takes image on all previous sections and variations of the movement. At the end of the coda, there is a surprise, which is when the dynamic changes from pp on the flute and strings only to ff all of a sudden by a huge crash on the whole orchestra, as the tempo abruptly changes from Poco Andante to Presto. A flurry of sforzandos appear, and the finale ends with three large E-flat major chords on the tutti, marked ff.
History
Beethoven began composing the third symphony soon after Symphony No. 2 in D major, Opus 36 and completed the composition in early 1804. The first public performance of Symphony No. 3 was on 7 April 1805 in Vienna.[11]
Thematic origins
There is significant evidence that the Eroica, perhaps unlike Beethoven's other symphonies, was constructed back-to-front.[10]:75 The theme used in the fourth movement, including its bass line, originate from the seventh of Beethoven's 12 Contredanses for Orchestra, WoO 14,[12] and also from the Finale to his ballet The Creatures of Prometheus, Op. 43, both of which were composed in the winter of 1800–1801.[10]:58 The next year, Beethoven used the same theme as the basis for his Variations and Fugue for Piano in E♭ Major, Op. 35, now commonly known as the Eroica Variations due to the theme's re-use in the symphony. It is the only theme that Beethoven used for so many separate works in his lifetime, and each use is in the same key of E♭ major.[10]:58
The "Wielhorsky Sketchbook", Beethoven's principal sketchbook for 1802, contains a two-page movement plan in E♭ major that directly follows the sketches for the Opus 35 Variations, which has been identified as being intended for the Third Symphony.[13][10]:59[lower-alpha 3] While the movement plan gives no explicit indication regarding the finale, Lewis Lockwood argues that "there cannot be any doubt that Beethoven intended from the start" to use the same theme (and bass of the theme) that he had just fleshed out in the Opus 35 Variations. Thus, it is argued that Beethoven's initial conception for a complete symphony in E♭ – including its first three movements – emerged directly from the Op. 35 Variations.[10]:60
The first movement's main theme (mm. 2–6) has thus been traced back to the bass line theme of the Opus 35 variations (E♭, B♭↓, B♭↑, E♭) by way of intermediate versions found in one of Beethoven's sketchbooks.[13][10]:60–61 In the second movement, the combined tonality (melody and bass) of the Opus 35 theme's first four bars – E♭, B♭↓, B♭7(A♭)↑, E♭ – appears in slightly altered form as the funeral's march's second theme (E♭, B♭↓, A♭↑, E♮) (mvt. II, mm. 17–20), followed by two sudden forte B♭s that echo later elements of the theme. That same tonality then appears unaltered as the scherzo's main theme (mvt. III, mm. 93–100).
Thus, the first three movements can be viewed as symphonic-length "variations" on the Opus 35 theme, ultimately anticipating the theme's appearance in the fourth movement. Moreover, Beethoven's choice to begin the symphony with a theme adapted from the bass line is also paralleled in the fourth movement, in which the bass theme is heard as the first variation before the main theme ultimately appears. This again parallels the structure of the Opus 35 variations themselves. Finally, the loud E♭ chord that begins the Opus 35 variations themselves is moved here to the beginning of the first movement, in the form of the two chords that introduce the first movement.
Alternatively, the first movement's resemblance to the overture to the comic opera Bastien und Bastienne (1768), composed by twelve-year-old W. A. Mozart, has been noted.[6]:59–60[14] It was unlikely that Beethoven knew of that unpublished composition. A possible explanation is that Mozart and Beethoven each coincidentally heard and learned the theme from elsewhere.[15]
Dedication
Beethoven originally dedicated the third symphony to Napoleon Bonaparte, who he believed embodied the democratic and anti-monarchical ideals of the French Revolution. In the autumn of 1804, Beethoven withdrew his dedication of the third symphony to Napoleon, lest it cost him the composer's fee paid him by a noble patron; so, Beethoven re-dedicated his third symphony to Prince Joseph Franz Maximilian Lobkowitz – nonetheless, despite such a bread-and-butter consideration, the politically idealistic Beethoven titled the work "Buonaparte".[16] Later, about the composer's response to Napoleon having proclaimed himself Emperor of the French (14 May 1804), Beethoven's secretary, Ferdinand Ries said that:
In writing this symphony, Beethoven had been thinking of Buonaparte, but Buonaparte while he was First Consul. At that time Beethoven had the highest esteem for him, and compared him to the greatest consuls of Ancient Rome. Not only I, but many of Beethoven's closer friends, saw this symphony on his table, beautifully copied in manuscript, with the word "Buonaparte" inscribed at the very top of the title-page and "Ludwig van Beethoven" at the very bottom ... I was the first to tell him the news that Buonaparte had declared himself Emperor, whereupon he broke into a rage and exclaimed, "So he is no more than a common mortal! Now, too, he will tread under foot all the rights of Man, indulge only his ambition; now he will think himself superior to all men, become a tyrant!" Beethoven went to the table, seized the top of the title-page, tore it in half and threw it on the floor. The page had to be recopied, and it was only now that the symphony received the title Sinfonia eroica.[17]
An extant copy of the score bears two scratched-out, hand-written subtitles; initially, the Italian phrase Intitolata Bonaparte ("Titled Bonaparte"), secondly, the German phrase Geschriben auf Bonaparte ("Written for Bonaparte"), four lines below the Italian subtitle. Three months after retracting his initial Napoleonic dedication of the symphony, Beethoven informed his music publisher that "The title of the symphony is really Bonaparte". In 1806, the score was published under the Italian title Sinfonia Eroica ... composta per festeggiare il sovvenire di un grande Uomo ("Heroic Symphony, Composed to celebrate the memory of a great man").[18]
Early performances and reviews
Composed from the autumn of 1803 until the spring of 1804, the earliest rehearsals and performances of the third symphony were private, and took place in the Vienna palace of Beethoven's noble patron, Prince Lobkowitz. An account record dated 9 June 1804, submitted by the prince's Kapellmeister Anton Wranitzky, shows that the prince hired twenty-two extra musicians (including the third horn required for the Eroica) for two rehearsals of the work.[19] The fee paid to Beethoven by Prince Lobkowitz would also have secured further private performances of the symphony that summer on his Bohemian estates, Eisenberg (Jezeří) and Raudnitz (Roudnice). The first public performance was on 7 April 1805, at the Theater an der Wien, Vienna; for which concert the announced (theoretical) key for the symphony was Dis (D♯ major, 9 sharps).[20]
Reviews of the work's public premiere (on 7 April 1805) were decidedly mixed. The concert also included the premiere of a Symphony in E flat major by Anton Eberl (1765–1807) that received better reviews than Beethoven's symphony.[20][21] One correspondent describes the first reactions to the Eroica:
Musical connoisseurs and amateurs were divided into several parties. One group, Beethoven's very special friends, maintains that precisely this symphony is a masterpiece.... The other group utterly denies this work any artistic value ... [t]hrough strange modulations and violent transitions ... with abundant scratchings in the bass, with three horns and so forth, a true if not desirable originality can indeed be gained without much effort. ...The third, very small group stands in the middle; they admit that the symphony contains many beautiful qualities, but admit that the context often seems completely disjointed, and that the endless duration ... exhausts even connoisseurs, becoming unbearable to the mere amateur. To the public the symphony was too difficult, too long ... Beethoven, on the other hand, did not find the applause to be sufficiently outstanding.[22]
One reviewer at the premiere wrote that "this new work of B. has great and daring ideas, and ... great power in the way it is worked out; but the symphony would improve immeasurably if B. could bring himself to shorten it, and to bring more light, clarity, and unity to the whole."[23] Another said that the symphony was "for the most part so shrill and complicated that only those who worship the failings and merits of this composer with equal fire, which at times borders on the ridiculous, could find pleasure in it".[24] But a reviewer just two years later described the Eroica simply as "the greatest, most original, most artistic and, at the same time, most interesting of all symphonies".[25]
The finale in particular came in for criticism that it did not live up to the promise of the earlier movements. An early reviewer found that "[t]he finale has much value, which I am far from denying it; however, it cannot very well escape from the charge of great bizarrerie."[26] Another agreed that "[t]he finale pleased less, and that "the artist often wanted only to play games with the audience without taking its enjoyment into account simply in order to unloose a strange mood and, at the same time, to let his originality sparkle thereby".[27] An exhaustive review of the work in a leading music journal made an observation that may still be familiar to first-time listeners: "this finale is long, very long; contrived, very contrived; indeed, several of [its] merits lie somewhat hidden. They presuppose a great deal if they are to be discovered and enjoyed, as they must be, in the very moment of their appearance, and not for the first time on paper afterwards."[28] A review of an 1827 performance in London wrote that this particular performance "most properly ended with the funeral march, omitting the other parts, which are entirely inconsistent with the avowed design of the composition".[29]
The symphony premiered in London on 26 March 1807 at the Covent Garden Theatre and in Boston on 17 April 1810 by the newly founded Boston Philharmonic Society both performances receiving fairly mixed reviews.
Manuscripts and editions
The original autograph manuscript does not survive. A copy of the score with Beethoven's handwritten notes and remarks, including the famous scratch-out of the dedication to Napoleon on the cover page, is housed in the library of the Gesellschaft der Musikfreunde in Vienna. A first published edition (1806) of Beethoven's Eroica is on display at the Lobkowicz Palace in Prague.[30]
Several modern scholarly editions have appeared in recent decades, including those edited by Jonathan Del Mar (published by Bärenreiter), Peter Hauschild (Breitkopf & Härtel), and Bathia Churgin (Henle).
Assessment
Significance
The work is a milestone work in classical music; it is twice as long as the symphonies of Joseph Haydn and Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart – the first movement is almost as long as a Classical symphony (with repetition of the exposition). Thematically, it covers more emotional ground than Beethoven's earlier symphonies, and thus marks a key milestone in the transition between Classicism and Romanticism that would define Western art music in the early decades of the nineteenth century.
The second movement especially displays a great emotional range, from the misery of the funeral march theme, to the relative solace of happier, major-key episodes. The finale displays a similar emotional range, and is given a thematic importance then unheard of. In earlier symphonies, the finale was a quick and breezy conclusion; here, the finale is a lengthy set of variations and a fugue.[31]
Critical opinions and phrases
- In the Treatise on Instrumentation and Orchestration (1844, 1855), Hector Berlioz discussed Beethoven's orchestral use and applications of the horn and of the oboe in this symphony.[32]
- The critic J. W. N. Sullivan said that the first movement expresses Beethoven's courage in confronting deafness; the second movement, slow and dirge-like, communicates his despair; the third movement, the scherzo, is an "indomitable uprising of creative energy"; and the fourth movement is an exuberant outpouring of energy.[33]
- In Metamorphosen, Study for 23 Solo Strings (1945), Richard Strauss presents themes similar to the funeral march of the Sinfonia Eroica; near the conclusion of the Metamorphoses, the bass quotes the funeral march proper from the Sinfonia Eroica. Academics speculate that Strauss's sub-title "In Memoriam" refers to Ludwig van Beethoven.[34]
- In the recording Eroica (1953) and in the book The Infinite Variety of Music (1966), the conductor and composer Leonard Bernstein said that the first and second movements are "perhaps the greatest two movements in all symphonic music".[5][35]
- In the article Beethoven's Cry of Freedom (2003), the Marxist critic Gareth Jenkins said that in the Sinfonia Eroica "Beethoven was doing for music what Napoleon was doing for society – turning tradition upside down", and so embodied the "sense of human potential and freedom" that first appeared during the French Revolution.[36]
- In 2016, the Eroica was named the greatest symphony of all time by BBC Music Magazine, in a survey of 151 conductors working across the world.[37]
Use as funeral music
Since the 19th century, the adagio assai second movement has been a common funeral march played at state funerals, memorial services, and commemorations.
- In 1847, the symphony's second movement was played at the funeral of the German composer Felix Mendelssohn.[38]
- In 1940, F. Scott Fitzgerald died while listening to a recording of this symphony.[39]
- On 18 October 1944, the symphony's second movement was played at the funeral of Erwin Rommel, at the Ulm Rathaus.[40]
- In 1945, Serge Koussevitzky performed the second movement to mourn the death of the US President Franklin D. Roosevelt.[41]
- In 1957, Bruno Walter performed the entire symphony as the memorial concert for the conductor Arturo Toscanini.[42]
- On 22 November 1963, the Boston Symphony Orchestra gave an impromptu performance of the second movement of the Eroica symphony to mourn U.S. President John F. Kennedy, who was assassinated earlier that day.[43]
- In 1972, the Munich Philharmonic under Rudolf Kempe played the second movement at the funeral of the eleven Israeli athletes killed in the Munich massacre that occurred at the 1972 Summer Olympics.[44]
Cinema
In 2003, a Simon Cellan Jones-directed BBC/Opus Arte made-for-television film, Eroica, was released, with Ian Hart as Beethoven. The Orchestre Révolutionnaire et Romantique, conducted by Sir John Eliot Gardiner, performed the Eroica symphony in its entirety. The subject of the film is the private 1804 premiere of the work at the palace of Prince Lobkowitz (Jack Davenport). The film is based in part on Ferdinand Ries' recollections of the event.[45] In the film Beethoven does not learn that Napoleon has crowned himself Emperor of France until after the performance of the symphony is over – while having dinner with Ferdinand Ries. Rather than tearing up the title page of the symphony, he simply crumples it up.
See also
Notes
- Bernstein identifies three transitional subjects,[5] while Grove identifies two.[6]:60–61
- Measure numbers in this article follow the traditional system, in which the measures of first endings are not counted.
- Lewis Lockwood credits Nathan Fishman as being the first to identify this movement plan as being intended for the Third Symphony.[10]:244 n. 15
References
- The Symphony, ed. Ralph Hill, Pelican Books (1949), p. 99.
- Symphony No. 6 in F Major, Op. 68 Pastorale (Schott), ed. Max Unger, p. vi.
- Explore the Score – Beethoven: Symphony No. 3 in E-flat major, Opus 55, Sinfonica eroica, Kenneth Woods, 27 January 2016
- Cooper, Barry, Beethoven (Oxford University Press 2008)
- Bernstein, Leonard, Eroica analysis (audio recording, 1956–57, to accompany 1953 Decca recordings), re-released by Deutsche Grammophon ("Original Masters" series) in 2005, Bernstein Eroica analysis 1/3 on YouTube
- Grove, George, Beethoven and his Nine Symphonies (Novello and Co., 1896), available on IMSLP (visited 21 May 2017)
- Sipe, Thomas, Beethoven: Eroica Symphony (Cambridge University Press 1998)
- Ries, Ferdinand; Franz Wegeler; Frederick Noonan (translator) (1987). Beethoven Remembered: The Biographical Notes of Franz Wegeler and Ferdinand Ries. Arlington, Virginia: Great Ocean Publishers. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-915556-15-1.
- Roden, Timothy J.; Wright, Craig; and Simms, Bryan R., Anthology for Music in Western Civilization, Vol. 2 (Schirmer 2009)
- Lockwood, Lewis, Beethoven's Symphonies – An Artistic Vision (W. W. Norton & Company, New York 2015)
- Rolland, Romain (1930). Beethoven. Translated by Hull, B. Constance (7th ed.). London: Kegan Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co. p. 112.
- Beethoven, Ludwig van Beethoven's Werke, Serie 2: Orchester-Werke, No. 17a, 12 Contretänze (Leipzig, Breitkopf & Härtel 1864), available on IMSLP (visited 20 May 2017
- Fishman, Nathan (ed.), Kniga eskizov Beethovena za 1802–1803, 3 vols. (Moscow 1962). Citation based on unpaginated translation available at AllThingsBeethoven.com, "A translation of Nathan Fishman's analysis of the sketches for the Third Symphony contained in the Wielhorsky sketchbook" (visited 20 May 2017).
- Bastien et Bastienne (Media notes). Paul Derenne, Martha Angelici, André Monde, Gustave Cloëz orchestra. L'Anthologie Sonore. 1940. FA 801-806.CS1 maint: others (link)
- Gutman, Robert W., Mozart: A Cultural Biography, 1999, p. 242
- "Lobkowicz Family History". Lobkowicz Collections. Archived from the original on 19 January 2012. Retrieved 11 February 2014.
- Eroica, Napoleon Series.
- Dahlhaus, Carl. Ludwig van Beethoven: Approaches to His Music. Clarendon Press, 1991, pp. 23–25.
- Account record currently on display in the exhibition at the Lobkowicz Palace, Prague.
- Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, 5th ed., 1954, Eric Blom, ed.
- Beach, David; Mak, Su Yin Susanna (2016). Explorations in Schenkerian Analysis. ISBN 9781580465595.
- Der Freymüthige vol. 3, Vienna, 17 April 1805 (17 April 1805): 332. Reprinted in translation in Senner, Wayne M.; Wallace, Robin, and Meredith, William, The Critical Reception of Beethoven's Compositions by His German Contemporaries, volume 2 (2001), p. 15, available at http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/unpresssamples/5 (visited 21 May 2017).
- Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung, vol. 7, "Vienna, 9 April" (1 May 1805): 501–02, reprinted in translation in Senner et al. vol. 2, p. 17
- Berlinische musikalische Zeitung, vol. 1, "Miscellaneous News, Vienna, 2 May 1805" (1805): 174, reprinted in translation in Senner et al. vol. 2, p. 18
- Journal des Lulus und der Modern, vol. 23, "On Permanent Concerts in Leipzig during the Previous Semiannual Winter Season" (1807), reprinted in translation in Senner et al. vol. 2, pp. 35–36.
- Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung, vol. 9, "News, Mannheim" (28 January 1807): 285–86, reprinted in translation in Senner et al. vol. 2, p. 19.
- Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung, vol. 9, "News, Prague" (17 June 1807): 610, reprinted in translation in Senner et al. vol. 2, p. 34.
- Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung, vol. 9, "Review" (18 February 1807): 321–33, reprinted in translation in Senner et al. Vol. 2, p. 30.
- The Harmonicon, vol. 5, pt. 1, p. 123, "Review of Royal Academic Concert on 30 April 1827" (1827), available on Google Books (visited 21 May 2017).
- This 1st ed. comprises 18 parts, and contains corrections made by Beethoven. Wien Kunst-u. Industrie-Comptoir, PN 512.
- Bernstein, Leonard, The Infinite Variety of Music, Hal Leonard Corporation, ISBN 978-1-57467-164-3
- Eroica Symphony Archived 16 May 2007 at the Wayback Machine, Wiſdom Portal.
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- Jenkins, Gareth. "Beethoven's Cry of Freedom", Socialist Worker (UK) 4 October 2003.
- Brown, Mark (4 August 2016). "Beethoven's Eroica voted greatest symphony of all time". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 September 2017.
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- Graham, Sheilah (1976). The Real F. Scott Fitzgerald: Thirty-Five Years Later. New York: Grosset & Dunlap. ISBN 978-0-448-11875-8.
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- Eroica on IMDb
External links
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- Reviews and further information:
- A site about the Eroica
- Program notes for the Philadelphia Orchestra
- Symphony No. 3 in E flat major ("Eroica"), Op. 55 short review on Allmusic
- George, Christopher T. (December 1998). "The Eroica Riddle: Did Napoleon Remain Beethoven's "Hero?"". Beethoven: Letters, Journals and Conversations. Napoleonic Scholarship: The Journal of the International Napoleonic Society. 1. ISBN 978-0-8371-9899-6.
- Prof John A Rice. "Beethoven, Reicha and the Eroica"., article about the debate between the two men on fugal theory and practice during the symphony's gestation
- Sheet music:
- Full score
- Symphony No. 3 is available in PDF format created from MuseData.
- Symphony No. 3: Scores at the International Music Score Library Project (IMSLP)
- Media:
- Eroica website from SF Symphony's 'Keeping Score' with Analysis, Background and Commentary by Michael Tilson Thomas (needs Flash).
- Discovering Music, BBC Radio 3. Videos of an analysis and complete performance of the symphony. The analysis is by Stephen Johnson and the symphony is performed by the BBC National Orchestra of Wales, under Christophe Mangou. Listening notes for the symphony are also available here.
- The Eroica Effect, Helsingborg Concert Hall. Complete performance of the symphony. The symphony is performed by the Helsingborg Symphony Orchestra, under Andrew Manze.
- Symphony No. 3, complete performance by the New York Philharmonic, directed by Bruno Walter, available at the Internet Archive.