
A vivid portrait unfolds as the biography follows Beethoven through the turbulent years after 1819, when his personal life became as dramatic as his music. Readers encounter his fraught legal battles over his nephew’s guardianship, mounting debts, and the relentless pressure of securing patronage, all set against the backdrop of a composer whose hearing was failing yet whose imagination remained fierce. The narrative weaves his daily routines, correspondence, and the intimate moments that reveal both his stubborn pride and hidden vulnerabilities.
The second half of the work shines a light on the masterpieces that emerged from this storm—his monumental Ninth Symphony, the soaring Mass in D, and the final string quartets that push the boundaries of form. Interactions with contemporaries such as Schubert, Liszt, and the London Philharmonic Society illustrate a network of admiration, rivalry, and occasional misunderstanding. Through careful scholarship and vivid detail, the biography offers listeners a richly textured glimpse into the genius’s last creative surge and the human struggles that framed it.
Language
en
Duration
~16 hours (954K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Henry Flower and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries and Google Print.)
Release date
2013-08-29
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1817–1897
Best known for producing one of the first deeply researched lives of Beethoven, this American writer and scholar spent years chasing down letters, documents, and firsthand accounts across Europe. His work helped change musical biography from storytelling into serious historical research.
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