Beethoven, Coriolan Overture, op.62
At the request of the writer Heinrich Joseph von Collin, Beethoven composed an overture to Collin's tragedy in five acts Coriolanus (1802) in the spring of 1807. It was given its first performance in March 1807 in Prince Lobkowitz's palace in Vienna. Although Beethoven's music did not bring about the hoped-for stage revival of Collin's tragedy, the Overture made its breakthrough as an independent concert piece. A dramatic work that owes its somber quality to Collin's tragedy, it came to be favored for solemn occasions. Music for the masses! This could have been the war cry of both Beethoven and Karajan. For this they had in common: the wish to reach out to millions and ensure the survival of their art. Beethoven, at the dawn of the romantic era, no longer wrote exclusively for titled patrons, but for the middle classes. To reach them, he needed new means of popularizing and distributing his works, such as concerts for paying audiences and the publication of arrangements for everything from piano to brass band. In the mid 20th century, Herbert von Karajan also saw a new way of reaching out to greater numbers of people through the combination of picture and sound - the video recording. This recording of the Coriolan Overture dates from 1975 and is part of a special "overture" special produced with the Berlin Philharmonic for Unitel.