Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Greatest Concert of All Time

Episode Date: July 14, 2023

On December 22, 1808, concertgoers in Vienna, Austria, witnessed a significant event in music history.  Ludwig van Beethoven held a concert where he debuted several of his greatest works in one progr...am. While the concert has gone down as one of the most important in history, the conditions during the concert and actual performance was….. sub-par.  Learn more about the concert of December 22, 1808, aka the Greatest Concert of All Time, on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Expedition Unknown  Find out the truth behind popular, bizarre legends. Expedition Unknown, a podcast from Discovery, chronicles the adventures of Josh Gates as he investigates unsolved iconic stories across the globe. With direct audio from the hit TV show, you’ll hear Gates explore stories like the disappearance of Amelia Earhart in the South Pacific and the location of Captain Morgan's treasure in Panama. These authentic, roughshod journeys help Gates separate fact from fiction and learn the truth behind these compelling stories.   InsideTracker provides a personal health analysis and data-driven wellness guide to help you add years to your life—and life to your years. Choose a plan that best fits your needs to get your comprehensive biomarker analysis, customized Action Plan, and customer-exclusive healthspan resources. For a limited time, Everything Everywhere Daily listeners can get 20% off InsideTracker’s new Ultimate Plan. Visit InsideTracker.com/eed. Subscribe to the podcast!  https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen   Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 On December 22nd, 1808, concert goers in Vienna, Austria were witnessed to a monumental event in music history. Ludwig von Beethoven held a concert where he debuted several of his greatest works in one program. While the concert has gone down as one of the most important in history, the conditions during the concert and actual performance was subpar. Learn more about the concert of December 22nd, 1808, aka the greatest concert of all time, on this episode of Everything Everywhere daily. What if your perceptions about the past were wrong? Throughline is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed. It effectively turned day into night and how it shaped the world now. Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
Starting point is 00:01:08 215 years ago, the business of music was very different than it is today. Today, if you go to a concert, you're going to hear a band or performer play music that you're already familiar with. Music is first released as a recording, people listen to it, and then go to see the artist perform it live. However, before there were recordings, you probably hadn't heard any individual work created by a composer. There was only live music, and there weren't a lot of live performances. In the world of classical music, it still mostly works that way. An orchestra will often commission a work and perform its world premiere. So if you attended an orchestral performance, which very few people back then did, no one was really sure what they were going to hear.
Starting point is 00:01:50 Whatever it was, it was something they had probably never heard before because the only time you would have heard something was at another concert. So when I'm talking about a concert in this era, I am not talking about the Taylor Swift era's tour. I'm not talking about James Brown live at the Apollo. I'm not talking about the Almond Brothers live at Fillmore East. I'm not talking about Johnny Cash live at Folsom Prison. And I'm not talking about cheap trick live at Buda Khan. And I'm not even talking about Jimmy Hendrix at the Monterey Pop Festival. The economics of being an 18th or 19th century composer was rough. There were basically three ways that you could make money. The first was that you might get lucky and have someone
Starting point is 00:02:28 commission a new composition. This would usually have to be someone like a monarch, a rich member of the nobility, or maybe a bishop. The primary way that most composers made money was by teaching music to the children of wealthy patrons. However, it was also possible to make money by simply being entrepreneurial and holding your own concert for your behalf. It wasn't done that often, but if you could do it, you could make a year's worth of income in a single evening. In 1808, this is what Beethoven decided to do. He was going to host a concert, which at the time was called an academy, and perform a collection of his compositions, including several works that were never heard before. There was, however, a problem. The number of places where you could host a concert
Starting point is 00:03:11 was very limited. There were only so many venues available in Vienna. Moreover, you couldn't do it in the summer because most of your audience left the city for their country estates. There were no concert halls specifically designed for music as we know them today. Of the venues where you could host a concert, all of them were theaters booked most of the year for operas, which was the dominant form of entertainment for the upper class at the time. Operas, however, were banned during Lent and Advent, the periods just before Christmas and Easter, which meant that you had about a six-week window every year where you could host a non-operatic concert.
Starting point is 00:03:48 Beethoven ended up preserving the Tejater Andervine for December 22nd, 1808, just a few days before Christmas. The Tejater Anderveen was a venue that Beethoven was familiar with. He had debuted several of his compositions there before, including, including, and he was a venue. the only opera he had ever composed, Fidelio, as well as his third symphony, dubbed the Eroica. Opened in 1801, it was a private facility that had a reputation for being one of the best and most comfortable theaters in Europe at the time. The interior of the theater was so lavish that it was said it could make money by charging people admission to see it without ever having to put on a
Starting point is 00:04:22 performance. Also of note, in German, Vienna is known as Vien. However, the Vien in Tejater-Ander-Vin actually refers to the Vien River, which flowed nearby. The theater owner allowed Beethoven to do a private benefit concert because he had been very generous in the past in supporting concerts that benefited charity. The schedule Beethoven put together was a bit of a sampler. There really was no consistent theme to the evening other than it was music that he had composed. Moreover, Beethoven himself would be performing as a piano soloist. At the time in Vienna, Beethoven may have been better known for his abilities as a musician
Starting point is 00:04:57 than he was for his compositions. He would often do improvisational performances where he would riff like a jazz performer. I should also note that by 1808, Beethoven's hearing loss had become quite severe. Even though Beethoven had secured the venue, he had difficulty finding musicians and performers. The Tejater Anderveen had its own in-house orchestra, which was one of the better ones, but most of them had been previously scheduled that evening to perform in a benefit for the widows and orphans of musicians. So, Beethoven had to get amateur musicians and musicians from other versions. venues to fill in, a group that had never played together before.
Starting point is 00:05:34 Beethoven was actually banned from rehearsals by the musicians because he kept interfering. It eventually reached a point where he was asked to leave, or they wouldn't perform. The evening of December 22nd finally arrived, and the performance was scheduled to begin at 6.30 p.m. But there was another problem. The heating system for the theater wasn't functioning that night, so everyone had to sit in the theater for four hours without any heat. So far, nothing I've mentioned would lead you to believe that this would be considered the greatest concert of all time by music historians. So why has it gained this reputation?
Starting point is 00:06:10 The program set by Beethoven was in two parts with an intermission in between. The first half of the performance began with the world premiere of his symphony number sixth in F major, dubbed the pastoral. The audience, for the first time ever, would have heard something like this. The debut of his pastoral symphony would probably be. have been enough to make the evening noteworthy. However, this was just the opening. Next on the list was an aria he had written over 10 years earlier called A Perfito. The soloist for the evening was a 17-year-old soprano, Josephine Schultz Kulchitzky.
Starting point is 00:07:12 She was a last-minute replacement because the original soloist had quit because Beethoven insulted her, which he was known to do. After that came the Gloria from his Mass and C major. At the time in Vienna, it was illegal to perform church music outside of a church, so he didn't publicize this piece beforehand. The first half of the performance ended with another world premiere. Beethoven's piano concerto number four in G major, with Beethoven himself at the piano. The audience was treated to something like this. That was just the first half of the concert, and that would be a full performance for most professional orchestras today. As the intermission finished, the crowd sat down for the second half of the performance in the still cold theater.
Starting point is 00:08:21 The second half of the performance opened with yet another world premiere. This time the audience, for the first time ever, heard the four most famous notes in music history. That is, of course, Beethoven's Fifth Symphony. The audience had now been hit with the world premieres of not one, but two of the greatest symphonies of all time in the span of a single evening. And the evening wasn't over with yet. Next on the schedule was another unpublicized piece from his Mass and C major, the Sanctus. That was followed by an extemporaneous Fantasia piece performed by Beethoven on the piano, which was something, as I mentioned before, he was famous for.
Starting point is 00:09:23 The final piece of the evening was one which Beethoven finished writing just days before the performance. It was to be the fourth and final world premiere of the evening. Beethoven wanted to end the concert with a bang, so he wrote something that brought together all of the musical performers of the evening, himself as a piano soloist, the vocalists and the choir, as well as the full orchestra. The result was his choral fantasy for solo piano, solo vocal, chorus, and orchestra. The significance of the choral fantasy wasn't the piece itself. It isn't one of Beethoven's better-known compositions. As he himself later admitted, it laid the groundwork for perhaps
Starting point is 00:10:18 his greatest composition, his ninth symphony, on which I've done a previous episode. Beethoven had thrown the kitchen sink at his audience. To put this in modern terms, imagine if the Beatles held a concert, and in the first half of that concert, they performed the entire Sergeant Pepper's album for the very first time, and then in the second half, they performed the entire Abbey Road album for the very first time. What Beethoven had done was the classical music equivalent of that. While I hope most of you can at least appreciate why this concert is considered great, at least by historical standards, I also have to confess that in terms of the performance itself, the concert wasn't actually that good.
Starting point is 00:11:00 This mainly had to do with the lack of preparation by the orchestra, having to bring in amateurs to perform and a last-minute substitution of the solo vocalist. In fact, during the choral fantasy, everything fell apart, and they had to start over from scratch, something that would never happen with a modern professional orchestra. As for the audience, they were hit with a lot all at once, not to mention the fact that it was four hours in a cold theater. Johann Friedrich Reichhardt, a composer and contemporary of Beethoven, was in attendance. He recalled the evening by saying, quote, There we sat in the most bitter cold from half past six until half past ten,
Starting point is 00:11:37 and confirm for ourselves the maxim that one may easily have too much of a good thing, still more of a powerful one. End quote. A German music periodical of the time, Elgamineka Musicale Scheitung, wrote of the concert, quote, To judge all of these pieces after one and only one hearing, especially considering the language of Beethoven's works, in that so many were performed one after the other, and that most of them are so grand and long, is downright impossible. End quote.
Starting point is 00:12:06 It wasn't until years later as Beethoven's works became more widely performed and eventually recorded, that the scope of what happened on December 22nd, 1808, was recognized for what it was. Over the last several decades, several orchestras have recreated the December 21st, 22nd concert, performing all of the same works in the same order in a single evening. And they'll often serve dinner during the intermission just to give the performers and the audience a bit of an extended break. The concert was also noteworthy for another reason. It was the last time that Beethoven ever performed in public. He was 38 years old, and his hearing loss had become so severe that he was no longer able to perform to his standards. He did keep composing,
Starting point is 00:12:47 however, until his death in 1827. A concert like the one that Beethoven held is unlikely ever to happen again. It isn't just a function of Beethoven's singular genius, but mostly a function of how the music industry works today. You could make far more money by releasing music in pieces and as a recording than by doing everything at once in a live concert. Nonetheless, at that point in history, the forces of music and business came together to create a singular concert that has gone down in history. The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
Starting point is 00:13:24 The associate producers are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett. I just want to thank everyone, including the show's producers, who support the show over on Patreon. If you'd like to support the show, just head over to patreon.com, which is currently the only place where you can get show merchandise. Also, if you want to talk to other listeners about the show, head over to our Facebook group or Discord server, both of which have links in the show notes.

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