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More about Beethoven in Steiner's Shop: Publishers’ Corrections to the First Edition of the Quartet in F Minor, op. 95. A tribute to Alan Tyson

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 April 2011

Jonathan Del Mar
Affiliation:
London

Extract

Alan Tyson (1926–2000) was one of the most remarkable, influential and prolific Beethoven scholars of his generation. Yet his achievements ran wider than Beethoven, and even wider than music: he studied psychoanalysis, practised as a psychiatrist, and learnt German specifically in order to translate many of the writings of Siegmund Freud. Even before the claims of his musicological researches finally won over his medical career, he was the first to demonstrate the importance, and indeed authenticity, of many English editions of Beethoven. He published a huge amount of bibliographical material on Beethoven, both articles and books, particularly (in collaboration with Douglas Johnson and Robert Winter) a complete catalogue of Beethoven's sketchbooks. Not content with that, however, he turned his attention to Mozart, becoming the prime authority on the paper types and watermarks of Mozart's autograph manuscripts. Shortly before his death a Festschrift was dedicated to him, in which the complete bibliography of his publications occupies nine full pages.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2006

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References

1 Brandenburg, Sieghard, ed., Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven: Studies in the Music of the Classical Period: Essays in Honour of Alan Tyson (Oxford: Clarendon, 1998): 301–9.Google Scholar

2 Tyson, Alan, ‘Notes on Five of Beethoven's Copyists’, Journal of the American Musicological Society, 23 (1970): 439–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

3 Tyson, Alan, Mozart: Studies of the Autograph Scores (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1987): 246–61.Google Scholar

4 Tyson, Alan, ‘Beethoven in Steiner's Shop’, The Music Review (1962): 119–27.Google Scholar

5 Ibid., 120.

6 Ibid., 121.

7 Ibid., 126.

8 Ibid., 121.

10 Ibid., 121.

13 But not described in ibid., 121; acquired later, perhaps.

14 Ibid., 121.

15 Beethoven, Ludwig van, Symphony No.1 [2, etc.], ed. Mar, Jonathan Del (Kassel: Bärenreiter, 19962000).Google Scholar

16 Tyson, ‘Beethoven’, 124.

17 Ibid., 122–3.

18 Dorfmüller, Kurt, Beiträge zur Beethoven-Bibliographie (Munich: G. Henle, 1978): 334.Google Scholar

19 Tyson, ‘Beethoven’, 120.

21 Beethoven, Ludwig van, Symphony No. 7 in A major op. 92, ed. Mar, Jonathan Del (Kassel: Bärenreiter, 2000): 28.Google Scholar

22 Beethoven, Ludwig van, Symphony No. 8 in F major op. 93, ed. Mar, Jonathan Del (Kassel: Bärenreiter, 1997): 24–5.Google Scholar

23 Brandenburg, Sieghard, ed., Ludwig van Beethoven: Briefwechsel Gesamtausgabe (Munich: G. Henle, 1996): Letter 1015Google Scholar; Anderson, Emily, ed. and trans., The Letters of Beethoven (London: Macmillan, 1961): Letter 682Google Scholar.

24 Brandenburg, Briefwechsel: Letter 892; Anderson, Letters: Letter 678.

25 Brandenburg, Briefwechsel: Letter 896; Anderson, Letters: Letter 606a.

26 Brandenburg, Briefwechsel: Letter 1015; Anderson, Letters: Letter 682.

27 Brandenburg, Briefwechsel: 3.337.

28 Kalischer, Alfred Christlieb, Beethovens sätliche Briefe, 2nd printing, Vol. 3, revised by Theodor von Frimmel (Berlin: Schuster & Loeffler, 1911): Letter 614.Google Scholar

29 Frimmel, Theodor von, Neue Beethoveniana (Vienna: Carl Gerold's Sohn, 1890): 105–6.Google Scholar

31 Brandenburg, Briefwechsel, Letter 1015.

32 Frimmel, Neue, 105-6.

33 Anderson, Letters, Letter 682.

34 Brandenburg, Briefwechsel, Letter 1015.