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Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart had a powerful influence on the work of Ludwig van Beethoven. Beethoven knew much of Mozart's work, and modeled a number of his own compositions on works of Mozart. In addition, the two may have met briefly in Vienna in 1787. This article covers both the possible meeting and the influence on Beethoven of Mozart's compositions.
The Vienna MeetingThere are some points on which there is scholarly agreement. First, the visit was brief, lasting roughly two weeks.1 Second, Beethoven returned at least in part because of his mother's medical condition (she was dying of tuberculosis, passing away in July of that year2). Beethoven had a nearly-incapacitated alcoholic father and two younger brothers, so it is understandable that he would have felt obliged to go home to help keep his family together. Lastly, it is agreed that the written documentation for the facts of Beethoven's visit is thin. As far as what happened during the visit, there are various views. The 19th century biographer Otto Jahn gives the following anecdote:
Unfortunately, Jahn does not say where he got this from, mentioning only that "it was communicated to me in Vienna on good authority." No corroboration of the story from any contemporary document (for example, a letter of Beethoven's or Mozart's, or a reminiscence of any of Beethoven's contemporaries) supports the story. Perhaps as a result, contemporary scholarship seems reluctant to propagate Jahn's story. Notably, the authoritative Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians does not mention it; its account of the visit is as follows:
Maynard Solomon, who has written closely-researched biographies of both Mozart and Beethoven, likewise does not mention Jahn's tale. Instead he offers a rather harsh possibility, that Mozart might have given Beethoven an audition and then rejected him:
Solomon goes on to enumerate other matters that were keeping Mozart preoccupied at the time: his father's approaching death, a visit to Prague, the beginnings of work on Don Giovanni, and the writing of "a vast amount of other music." Moreover, Mozart at the time already had a pupil living in his home, the nine-year-old Johann Nepomuk Hummel. Lastly, he notes that Beethoven eventually returned to Vienna, but only in 1792--after Mozart had died in 1791. A hypothesis that is apparently compatible with all the documentary evidence (other than Jahn's unsourced report) is that Mozart and Beethoven simply never met.5 Irrespective of which of these hypotheses is true, it seems that the first Vienna visit was the start of an unhappy time for Beethoven. The Grove Dictionary notes:
Influence of Mozart's compositions on BeethovenThat Mozart's work continued to influence Beethoven is an uncontroversial claim. To give one example, the role played by Mozart's 40th Symphony in the composition of Beethoven's Fifth can be documented from Beethoven's sketchbooks, where Beethoven copied out a sequence from Mozart's work that he adapted into his own symphony; see Symphony No. 5 (Beethoven). It is also believed that some of Beethoven's works have direct models in comparable works by Mozart; for example Charles Rosen sees Mozart's C minor piano concerto K. 491 as a model for Beethoven's Third Concerto in the same key,7, the Quintet for Piano and Winds K. 452 for Beethoven's comparable work Op. 16,8 and the A major String Quartet K. 464 for Beethoven's A major quartet Op. 18 No. 5.9 Beethoven also wrote cadenzas (WoO 58) to the first and third movements of Mozart's D minor piano concerto K. 466, as well as four sets of variations on Mozart's themes:
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