Beethoven – 32 Variations In C Minor On An Original Theme, WoO 80
by richibi
of all musical forms variations lend themselves
best to intellectual speculation, which is to say,
by way of concepts, words, objects of rational,
cohesive, not nebulous, thought
it is immediately evident that a set of variations
considers the many facets of a given subject, in
music represented by a theme to be analyzed,
dissected, explored and, in the best of cases,
rendered transcendental
this is of course also the case in any science
it is more difficult to so investigate a waltz, a
sarabande, a rhapsody, which speak a much
less literal language usually, unless of course
the verbal construct itself has been applied to
the composition, “The Carnival of the Animals“
or “Pictures at an Exhibition“, for instance, but
that’s putting the cart before the theoretical
horse, unfair and unethical
variations demand inherently cerebral
participation, a considered evaluation, a
nearly literal result, music finds its one-way
ticket thereby to veritable language
around the same time as he wrote the
“Waldstein” Sonata, 1806, Beethoven wrote
Theme, WoO 80, my very favourite of his
sets of variations, courtesy here of the
inimitable Glenn Gould
note, in passing, the similarities between
the two contemporary works
of the C minor Variations, however utterly
an earlier great, accompanied by immensely
helpful annotated commentary the sum of
which is hugely more telling than its mere
point form parts, sharpening in the process,
inconspicuously but highly effectively, one’s
aesthetic pencil, pulse
what could be more fun than that
variations, incidentally, are a most democratic
form, where every iteration is the equal of the
other, given always, however, that fixed and
intractable initial model
an interesting interpolation, incidentally, that,
philosophically, of course, speaking, asking,
as it does, does democracy require, rest on,
a founding contextual blueprint, in light
especially of the infinite number of those
blueprints possible
is our democracy merely an arbitrary, and
only contingent, shade, therefore, of that
ideational abstract
you decide
psst: WoO is an acronym for Werke ohne
Opuszahl, or, in English, works
without opus number, Beethoven
seems to have been completely
unconcerned with naming his
compositions, that he’d written the
music had been apparently already
quite enough
[…] friend wrote me, after my most recent instalment about musical variations, a few very probing […]