The life story of the musician Beethoven
Beethoven
was born in the German city of Bonn, and his father was brutal forcing him to train to play the piano for long hours without mercy and beat him if he stopped and his childhood was miserable and when he was six he gave him in a party to play solo and at twelve he joined work with a friend of his father who was a player in the Tsarist court and gained experience Great at playing and singing.
When he was seventeen, he moved to Vienna and met Mozart and took some lessons from him in composition. Mozart's genius caught the eye of him. He said to his friends: Look to this young man, he will cause a stir in the world of music. At this time his mother died and returned to Bonn, and when he was twenty-two he moved to Vienna. Again, he was a student at the hands of Hayden, but his genius always exceeded the capabilities of his teachers, and became Vienna. His permanent residence, and his reputation began to spread, and a group of high-ranking friends in the community turned around him, as he was associated with the poet and philosopher, Goethe; With a solid friendship, the deafness began to flow to his hearing at the end of his twenties, which caused him excruciating psychological pain. Soon his talents as a musician, author and composer rose to fame, and the great aristocratic families welcomed him, but they put him as servants as he was for Hayden and Mozart, except that Beethoven. He did not accept that, as he was the first musician to adhere to that liberal tendency and to stand in the way of the established old habits. Which led to the elevation of the status of German musicians not only in his time but also after that, which increased the majesty of the art of music.
In his youth, Beethoven was a Democrat, convinced of the republican system, enthusiastic about the slogan of the French Revolution, freedom; Fraternity, and equality. He was also a fanatic admirer of Napoleon until one of his wonderful compositions gave him a symphony, Aroika, and then was violently shocked when news reached Vienna that Napoleon had proclaimed himself Emperor of France, and he tore in a violent outburst of the dedication he wrote on the first page of the manuscript of that symphony Among the most famous of his fifth symphonies, which he described as “The Blows of Destiny,” in which he announces his victory over life's difficulties, and his ninth symphony, the choir; That lasted 6 years, and was the fifth concerto; the imperial; The greatest of what was written for the piano.
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