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Recital Attendance and
Commentary Requirement All students
in Dr. Vess's section of IDST 2310 are required to attend
the recital by Dr. Greg Pepetone on Tuesday, November 16, at
8:00 in the Max Noah Hall. There
will be a sign-in sheet at the recital.
Look for Dr. Vess. Students will be required to write a
response of about a page on the music performed.
After reading Dr. Pepetone's commentary, attending his recital, AND participating
in his class lecture/discussion on the 18th, respond to the following
questions no later than November 30, 1999 Assignment:
1. In what ways does the music of Beethoven speak
to you? 2. What specific
aspects of Beethoven's
music strike you as heroic? 3. How does the music of Beethoven reflect our
unit theme of "art and the ordered cosmos?" Dr.
Pepetone=s Commentary:
In the first place, I'd like to explain the unusual title of my program.
"Agonistes" stir us to
renewed effort and a sense of connection with our fellow creatures._
One could argue that many people no longer want to be stirred that
way; they simply want to be entertained. Beethoven does entertain
us. Like Shakespeare he does so by reminding us that "ripeness
is all." He uses sound to paint a complete picture of what it
is to be human. It's a mistake to think of him as only a "dead,
white, European male." I've chosen to perform the three most popular of his Thirty-Two Piano
Sonatas -- the Pathetique, the Moonlight, and the Appassionata.
I'm also programming Für Elise and the Thirty-Two Variations
On An Original Theme. I chose these works because I love them.
Just as most actors wants to play Hamlet, most pianists want to play
this program at some point in their career. In a sense, this particular
cluster of works is Beethoven's Hamlet. The nicknames speak
for themselves: The Pathetique, a sonata that evokes the pathos
experienced by Beethoven during the onset of his irreversible deafness.
Für Elise and the Moonlight Sonata come under the
general heading of "love music". The Moonlight Sonata
exemplifies the ardor (Movt. I), playfulness and delicacy (Movt.II)
and passion (Movt. III) of romantic love. Indeed, its last movement
exhibits a primal power that a perceptive, but musically untrained,
colleague once compared to a "herd of stampeding buffalo."
The Appassionata Another reason I've chosen this repertoire is that I'm currently teaching
an interdisciplinary course entitled The Gothic Imagination,
in which Beethoven figures prominently. The subject matter of that
course is, to quote Wordsworth: "Those mysteries of being which
have made/And shall continue evermore to make/ Of the whole human
race one brotherhood." Considering how well known and frequently recorded this music is, some
people might ask, "Why should anyone seek out yet another version
of the 'same ol', same ol'?'_ My response to that question is that
just as films have made certain plays and stories familiar to people
who have never actually attended a theater production or read a novel,
modern sound recordings have created a largely false impression of
familiarity with the "standard repertoire."
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