Ludwig van Beethoven

Ludwig van Beethoven
Overture to Coriolan, Op. 62

One of history’s pivotal composers, Ludwig van Beethoven was born on December 15 or 16, 1770 in Bonn, and died in Vienna on March 26, 1827.  His Overture to Heinrich Joseph von Collin’s 1804 drama, Coriolan, was composed in 1807. 

It received its first performance in March of that same year at a private concert held at the palace of his patron, Prince Franz Joseph von Lobkowitz. His Symphony no. 4 and Piano Concerto no. 4 were also performed at this event. The Overture to Coriolan is scored for 2 flutes, 2 oboes, 2 clarinets, 2 bassoons, 2 horns, 2 trumpets, timpani, and strings.

Although Beethoven composed only one opera, Fidelio (originally titled Leonore), he was frequently drawn to compose overtures and incidental music to stage dramas, such as Goethe’s drama, Egmont. While lovers of theater may be familiar with William Shakespeare’s play, Coriolanus, Beethoven was inspired to write his Coriolan Overture to another drama involving the same character, Gaius Marcius Coriolanus. The author in question was Beethoven’s contemporary, the Viennese playwright Heinrich Joseph von Collins (1771-1811), whose play of the same name dates from 1804. Beethoven’s familiarity with the historical figure of Coriolanus was doubtlessly fed by not only Collin’s play, but also by his self-education whereby he read as much literature regarding Greco-Roman history, including Plutarch’s Parallel Lives of the Noble Greeks and Romans.

The Coriolan Overture is composed in the key of C Minor. Much has been written about this tonality being Beethoven’s choice for some of his most dramatic music. Think of his Piano Sonata, op. 13 (Gran Sonata Pathétique), his String Quartet, Op. 18, no. 4, the Piano Concerto no. 3, and above all, his Symphony no. 5 and you get the idea. The Coriolan Overture, whose compositional dates overlap with his work on the Fifth Symphony, comes closest in spirit to that titanic symphony. Indeed, the tautness of its structure, its aggressive and restless nature (representative of Coriolan’s personality), and relentless sense of forward motion make the first movement of the Fifth Symphony and the overture kinsmen. It opens with a powerful gesture—a long unison note that explodes into a dramatic chord. Beethoven repeats the gesture twice more before launching into its restless first theme. A secondary theme in the major mode, perhaps representing Coriolan’s mother’s futile effort to dissuade her son from attacking Rome, is overtaken by more the more dramatic elements, again suggesting Coriolan’s impetuous temperament.

Program note by David B. Levy, © 2022 

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