Lost Beethoven manuscript discovered after 115 years (AFP) Updated: 2005-10-14 09:02
A handwritten, working manuscript of one of Beethoven's most revolutionary
works had been rediscovered after 115 years by a librarian in Pennsylvania,
triggering fevered excitement among music historians.
This a close up
of part of Ludwig van Beethoven's autographed manuscript of the 'Grosse
Fuge' in B Flat Major for Piano Four-Hands, Op. 134, which will go under
the hammer 01 December 2005. The manuscript is expected to sale for 1.7 to
2.6 million USD. [AFP] |
| Sotheby's
auction house, which will offer "Grosse Fuge" for sale in London in December,
said Thursday that the 80-page score was "the longest and most important
manuscript to have appeared on the market in living memory."
Sotheby's experts have put an estimate on the lot of between 1.7 million and
2.6 million dollars.
"This is an amazing find," said Stephen Roe, Head of Sotheby's Manuscript
Department.
"The manuscript was only known from a brief description in a catalogue in
1890 and it has never before been seen or described by Beethoven scholars," Roe
said.
"Its rediscovery will allow a complete reassessment of this extraordinary
music," he added.
The manuscript was uncovered in July by Heather Carbo, a librarian who was
nearing the end of a huge inventory project in the archives of a theological
seminary in the suburbs of Philadelphia.
Carbo found the score in the very last cabinet she inspected in the basement
of the library.
"It was just sitting on that shelf. I was in a state of shock," Carbo told
the New York Times.
Written in brown and black ink, sometimes over pencil and with later
annotations in red crayon, the manuscript shows the extent of Beethoven's
working and reworking with some corrections so deep that the paper is rubbed
right through.
"The passion and struggle of Beethoven's working can be seen graphically,"
Sotheby's said, highlighting how the notes were written larger as the music
intensified.
"What this document gives us is rare insight into the imponderable process of
decision making by which this most complex of quartet movements is made over
into a work for piano four-hands," said Richard Kramer, a musicologist at the
University of New York.
Among Beethoven's last works from the period when he was deaf, "Grosse Fuge"
was originally composed as the finale for a string quartet. The rediscovered
manuscript is a transcribed version of the same piece for a piano duet.
The manuscript was last seen at an 1890 auction in Berlin. The buyer was
believed to have been William Howard Doane, a Cincinnati, Ohio, industrialist
who loved composing hymns.
In 1952, Doane's daughter made a gift to the Eastern Baptist Theological
Seminary in Philadelphia to establish a chapel.
The gift included music manuscripts including Mozart's Fantasia in C minor
and Sonata in C minor, a major find 15 years later which together with other
manuscripts fetched 1.7 million dollars.
The manuscript was put on display at the seminary Thursday for just one
afternoon.
It was then scheduled to be exhibited at Sotheby's showrooms in New York and
London before the auction on December 1.
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