The Reflection Of Beethoven's 5th Symphony

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Completed in 1808, Beethoven’s 5th Symphony 1st movement could arguably be considered his most popular and well known works of art. The impact of this powerful symphony has left distinct emotional reactions upon the listener for many centuries. Beethoven utilizes rhythmic energy in connection with a passionate contrast of vibrant melodies to produce a phenomenal masterpiece. After many years of musical instruction, I have heard this piece multiple times and have become very familiar with it, especially the first four opening notes. Because of the simplicity in the music that Beethoven wrote during his time, the common people of that day could easily understand the emotions that the music was trying to convey. Even today, listeners and audience …show more content…

The symphony opens with the first theme of the exposition without an introduction and consequently jumps in with its famous four-note motive. Three short notes on the same pitch descend slightly to a longer note making this rhythm the most important characteristic throughout his musical work. Beethoven credits the first four notes as a representation of “fate knocking at the door.”(1) The opening of the first theme in the exposition introduce the famous four notes that are played once, and then repeated multiple times symbolizing its importance. This is comparable to a mother who repeats important instructions to her children in hopes that they will remember what she has said. The second theme begins with a lighter, more happy tone, but is short lived when the music returns to the sound of the first theme, similar to frustration or …show more content…

A conversation develops between the woodwinds and the strings and as a result, the instruments talk back and forth one with another using several notes, which in turn dwindles down to two notes, then to one note, all the time making a decrescendo as the music descends to the sound of a whisper, almost as if a secret is being told. This is also known as, thematic degradation or a change in the theme. As a result, Beethoven brings us back to the same type of excitement found with the four note motive as if to say, ”Remember these?” Recapitulation is traditionally a repetition of the exposition with a slight variance in the harmony however, during the recapitulation, the symphony seems to come to a halt when an oboe soloist plays a small cadenza, after which, the strings pick up the theme and crescendo until the horns play their fanfare. A coda is used in music to bring about the end of a movement, but here Beethoven builds a new theme as it is playfully played between the woodwinds and the strings leading up to a climax. In the end, the main theme is reintroduced, adding on a few final

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