Haydn, Beethoven and Mozart

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    Haydn, Mozart, Beethoven

    The three composers, Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven, are considered the triumvirate ofcomposers of music in the classical style. Indeed, these three men gave us what is by far, thegreatest music of their time. Schubert is sometimes added to these three names, though Iwont discuss him here for the following reasons. Schubert composed mostly in the newRomantic style, rather than the classical style, until the last few years of his very short life. Heleft us with some great large-scale masterpieces, though not nearly as many as the otherthree composers named above.

    I want to focus mainly on the differences between the three composers, but first I shouldbriefly discuss the similarities. The classical style is a style in which form plays a moreimportant part than earlier or later styles. The use of sonata form is almost the definingcharacteristic of the style .(See my blog on sonata form). Sonata form was so pervasive that itinvaded every genre of music of the time, even opera and church music. The threecomposers under discussion here each created works that are a hybrid of other forms andsonata form. Rondo form and variation form were often blended with sonata form.

    To put it simply, sonata form begins with simplicity and tonal stability, builds in tensiontowards a middle section, and reduces the complexity and tension in the last section. Theclimax is always in the middle. That is where the most complex textures are usually found, aswell as the most far-ranging key changes, and the most agitated rhythmic patterns.

    Haydn did not create sonata form, but he was a master of it. His grasp of form was excellent,and at the same time, he took a few liberties with his conception of it. Haydn was fond of thefalse recapitulation. A false recapitulation is a device that can be used near the end of the

    development section of a sonata form movement. It is a way of fooling the listener intothinking the recapitulation has begun, when it in fact has not begun, and the music is still inthe harmonically unstable area of the development section. Of course such a thing as a falserecapitulation must be brief in order to be effective. Very soon after fooling the listener, themusic will be in the actual recapitulation.

    Aside from a false recapitulation, Haydn was fond of surprising the listener with manyunexpected turns and twists. Sudden key changes, unexpected shifts of rhythm or harmony, aphrase that leads into something totally different than what is expected; these are a few itemsin the bag of tricks that Haydn had up his sleeve. He was a genius at surprising the listenerwith unexpected things, yet still adhering to sonata form. His music is full of idiosyncrasies

    and eccentric ideas. He experimented constantly with new ways of surprising listeners. Heliked to startle the listener with a sudden and unexpected rest, or a fermata that unexpectedlybreaks the action. He liked to closely juxtapose remote keys, suddenly changing from one keyto a distant one, with no preparation. Mozart was more apt to prepare the listener for theintrusion of a remote key by gradually introducing it.

    Haydn was fond of taking a simple motif or germ in one of the themes of a movement andusing it as sort of a springboard from which emerges many different musical ideas throughoutthe movement. Many of his movements are monothematic. In fact one French critic wrote that

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    Haydn only needs one theme to create a symphonic movement while lesser composersneeded several. Mozart was certainly not a lesser composer, yet he was fond of using morethan one or two themes in a movement. Mozart had a knack of using several themes in onemovement, yet at the same time, creating a movement that in no way lacks in unity. The firstmovement of his so-called Paris Symphony (no.32) has a wealth of themes, yet never soundsdiffuse or lacking in unity.

    It has been pointed out in many books that Beethoven liked to combine Haydnsmonothematic technique with Mozarts use of multiple themes, and that he achieved this byway of creating a second theme that sounds like a variation or outgrowth of the first theme.There is some truth in this statement, though like all sweeping generalities, it is an inadequatestatement. Some of Beethovens movements can be analyzed in that manner, s uch as theopening movement of Symphony no 5, but Beethovens methods were quite varied anddiverse.

    Mozart is a contradiction in that he was more conservative and followed the rules muchmore than Haydn, yet his music is incomparable. Haydn was very much given to surprising,and even shocking the listener, yet Mozart rarely did this. His music is more regular and well

    behaved. Yet within the confines of the boundaries he seemingly imposed on himself, Mozartleft us many incomparable masterpieces.

    Haydn was apt to present his themes in the recapitulation in a different order than they werepresented in the exposition, and sometimes did not present his themes verbatim in therecapitulation. Mozart rarely reordered his themes, and almost always repeated themverbatim. Mozart could afford a more unaltered repetition of his themes because his themestended to be full-blown lyrical melodies.

    When it comes to piano trios, string quartets, and symphonies, Haydn left us more greatmasterpieces than Mozart, though the last three symphonies by Mozart are exquisitemasterpieces, equal to or surpassing any symphony of Haydn.. Of course it isnt fair tocompare the oeuvre of a man who died just before his 36th birthday with that of a man wholived to be 77.

    In opera Moza rt was unsurpassed. Haydn openly admitted that Mozarts operas were fargreater than his own. The classical concerto being so close in style to the classical opera,composers who were successful in one were usually successful in the other. This goes a longway toward explaining why Mozart was a composer of such great concertos, while Haydnsconcertos, for the most part, are mediocre works like his operas. The one concerto by Haydn,by the way, that I find to be a great masterpiece is his trumpet concerto. Though more,conservative than the usual work of Haydn, his trumpet concerto is a wonderful piece and caneasily take its place beside the great trumpet concerto by Hummel.

    In church music Mozart was far greater than Joseph Haydn. Haydn once said that his brotherMichael was a better composer of church music than he himself was. If you listen to Haydnsmasses for the Catholic Church you will see that they are really symphonies with choir. Thereare no stylistic differences between his masses and his symphonies. He did not have athorough grasp of the baroque ecclesiastic style, though Mozart had a deep understanding ofBach, Handel, and other masters of baroque church music. During his two trips to Londonafter his retirement from Esterhazy, Haydn became familiar with the great oratorios of Handel.Out of this new understanding of Handel, Haydn gave us his two great oratorios, Creation

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    and Seasons, both of which, in my opinion, far surpass the greatness of his masses, thoughin his very last mass, he finally achieved a satisfactory unification of symphonic and choralstyles.

    Beethoven was influenced a great deal by both Haydn and Mozart. He took a touch of thisand a touch of that from both of them, and infused his own unique personality into his music.To my ear, it seems that Beethoven was influenced much more by Haydn than Mozart,

    though a few of his early works are obviously modeled after works by Mozart. From Haydn,Beethoven got his love of the false recapitulation. Also from Haydn, comes Beethovens loveof the sudden and unexpected pause and the unexpected fermata. Beethoven was even morefond of sudden surprises than was Haydn. And Haydns high -spirited wit was certainly not loston him. Musical humor in the style of Haydn is found in almost every genre of music thatBeethoven composed in, from piano sonatas, to string quartets and symphonies, he issometimes deadly serious, and sometimes overtly comic. His symphony no 4 and symphonyno. 8 are replete with Haydnesque humor and wit.

    The idea of using a small germ or motif to generate the musical energy of an entire movementis something that Beethoven learned from Haydn. The opening movement of Symphony no. 5

    is a good example, but many examples of such a thing can be found in his late works.Essentially Beethoven used the forms that he inherited from Haydn and Mozart, ie sonataform, rondo, variation form, and expanded these forms. He increased the length and intensityof the development section. Beethoven had a tremendous variety of ways of creating asonata-form movement. He would sometimes be rather terse, going quickly from his firsttheme to his second theme, and then closing the exposition soon after presenting the secondtheme. Sometimes, like Mozart, he would use a group of first themes in the tonic key, andthen present a group of themes in another key, usually the dominant. Sometimes his sonata-form movements are very tightly argued. Other times they are somewhat looser in conception.The variety Beethoven created within the context of sonata form is astounding!

    Late in his life Beethoven became much more interested in counterpoint. He especiallybecame much more interested in fugues. He also became more interested in variation form,using it sometimes in movements to piano sonatas and string quartets. Indeed the finale of hisSymphony no. 9 can be thought of as a sort of combination of sonata form and theme andvariations.