zpostcode
Symphony No. 7 in A Major, Op. 92
Sep 10, 2025 10:35 AM

  

Symphony No. 7 in A Major, Op. 921

  Ludwig van BeethovenLudwig van Beethoven, portrait by Josef Karl Stieler.(more)Symphony No. 7 in A Major, Op. 92, symphony by Ludwig van Beethoven. Premiering in Vienna on December 8, 1813, the work is considered a notable example of the more ebullient side of Beethoven’s compositional personality and evidence that even after the onset of deafness, he yet found cause for musical optimism. Certainly it is far less fraught and explosive than his fifth and sixth symphonies, although it borrows or echoes a few elements from each.

  Beethoven began his Symphony No. 7 in the summer of 1811 while vacationing in the Bohemian spa city of Teplitz, completing it several months later. He himself conducted the premiere at a concert to benefit Austrian and Bavarian soldiers wounded at the battle of Hanau in the Napoleonic Wars. That same program also featured the premiere of the martial Wellington’s Victory. Eventually, Wellington’s Victory was dismissed as being of little lasting importance, but the symphony has had a happier history, becoming one of the composer’s most popular works and hailed even at that premiere as a significant piece; it was performed three more times within two and a half months of its debut and has remained an orchestral standard ever since.

  Beethoven called the Symphony No. 7 his “most excellent symphony,” and one music critic of the time reported, “this symphony is the richest melodically and the most pleasing and comprehensible of all Beethoven symphonies.” On the dissenting side, Carl Maria von Weber (1786–1826) heard the piece as evidence that its composer had lost his mind, and, Friedrich Wieck (1785–1873), a renowned piano teacher and Clara Schumann’s father, maintained that the music could only have been written by someone who was seriously intoxicated.

  Regardless of Beethoven’s state of sanity—or his state of sobriety—this symphony is one of the composer’s most optimistic works, and it quickly won some powerful friends. Richard Wagner (1813–83), who often faced his own hostile critics, thought the piece was perfect dance music, calling it “the apotheosis of the dance.” In Wagner’s words, “if anyone plays the Seventh, tables and benches, cans and cups, the grandmother, the blind and the lame, aye, the children in the cradle fall to dancing.” Eager to prove this imaginative theory, Wagner once danced to the Symphony No. 7, accompanied by his colleague and father-in-law Franz Liszt (1811–86) performing his own piano reduction of the orchestral score.

  Ludwig van Beethoven: Symphony No. 7 in A MajorSecond movement, “Allegretto,” of Beethoven's Symphony No. 7 in A Major, Opus 92; from a 1953 recording by the Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Wilhelm Furtwängler.(more)As it begins, the first movement may seem not particularly dancelike, as sweet wind lines are repeatedly interrupted by strongly punched chords in its Poco sostenuto introduction. Flowing string phrases promise motion but seem hesitant to take that step, and several minutes pass before the movement’s most prominent theme arrives with the brilliant colors and nimble dotted rhythms of the Vivace.

  By contrast, the second movement Allegretto, often performed separately from the rest of the symphony, is a funeral march in all but name. Often, several contrasting melodic ideas are made to coexist, as if Beethoven were imagining several processions converging upon the cemetery at once. Inasmuch as he was at work on this symphony during the years of the Napoleonic Wars, that experience would likely have been within his experience.

  Get a Britannica Premium subscription and gain access to exclusive content. Subscribe Now Wagner’s vision of the dance returns with the third movement Presto. Here, Beethoven alternates between two nimble melodies, the second more elegant than the first, but both using the triple meter 6/8 pattern found in many country dances.

  The Allegro con brio finale opens with a four-note motif that is closely related to the famous one with which Beethoven’s Symphony no. 5 begins. In that work, three repeated short notes are followed by a single longer note lower in pitch; here, the single long note comes before the short notes, rather than after, and the short notes are lower in pitch rather than higher than the long note. In either case, it is a rhythmic pattern that will recur throughout the movement, rising its head among much swirling action. Beethoven had given himself rather limited instrumental forces—only pairs of flutes, oboes, clarinets, bassoons, horns, and trumpets, with timpani and strings—yet he needed nothing more for brilliant dramatic effect.

Comments
Welcome to zpostcode comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Recommend >
Supply chain management: From raw materials to retail
     Take a look around your home. Almost every product you see—from the simplest grocery item to the most sophisticated device—took hundreds, if not thousands, of steps to get there. It required numerous resources, activities, and people to get from an idea to its end state. From raw materials and creation, to marketing, sales, and transportation—there’s a flow to the...
Frauenkirche
     FrauenkircheThe Frauenkirche, Dresden, Germany.(more)Frauenkirche, Lutheran church in Dresden, Germany, that has long been the symbolic heart of the city. It showed the beauty and power of Dresden and its dedication to Lutheranism, then later recalled the horrors of World War II, and now stands for the city’s resilience and the reconciliation between former enemies.   Dresden’s city council commissioned the...
What is credit counseling and how does it work?
     If you have debt, it’s easy for your obligations to become unmanageable. You may be feeling stressed—that’s relatable!—but you may be able to find some relief through credit counseling. A credit counselor can provide you with crucial support and education throughout your debt repayment journey.   If you’re ready to tackle your debt head-on and carry out a repayment plan,...
Shrinkflation: Inflation hiding in plain sight
     There sure is a lot of air in this bag of chips. A “fun size” candy bar was a lot more fun when we were kids. That new “easier-to-hold” sports drink bottle is the same height, but thinner in the middle. And why is Fluffy suddenly doing her “I’m hungry” meow two hours after dinner?   It’s not your imagination—it’s...
Information Recommendation
Robert D. Bullard
  Robert D. Bullard (born December 21, 1946, Elba, Alabama, U.S.) is an American sociologist and environmental activist, often referred to as the father of environmental justice.   Early life and education Bullard was born and raised in Elba, Alabama, a small town in the southeastern region of the state. His father was an electrician and a plumber, though he was unable...
Rafah
     RafahView over Rafah, a Palestinian city in the southern Gaza Strip, August 8, 2022.(more)      Gaza StripRafah, city along the border of the Gaza Strip and Egypt that, for most of the 20th and into the 21st century, has been bisected with an eastern half in the Gaza area and a western half in Egypt. It includes the only...
Temple Mount
  Temple Mount, site of the Temple of Jerusalem, which was destroyed by the Romans on the 9th/10th of Av in 70 ce (see Tisha be-Av). It consists of a raised platform that, since the 7th century, has been home to the Islamic holy sites of the Dome of the Rock and Al-Aqsa Mosque. The lower section of the compound’s Western...
Igbo Landing
  In 1803, having just overpowered their captors on a small slave vessel off the coast of a small island in Georgia, a group of Igbo people chose death over a life of enslavement and defiantly waded into the cool coastal waters and drowned. One of the largest mass suicides of enslaved West Africans in the history of chattel slavery, the...
Waterloo Battlefield
  Waterloo Battlefield, location, 3 miles (5 km) south of Waterloo, Belgium, where, on June 18, 1815, the Battle of Waterloo took place, marking Napoleon’s final defeat. In this battle, the British duke of Wellington’s 68,000 allied forces, including British, Dutch, Belgian, and German troops, and some 45,000 Prussians led by Gebhard Leberecht von Blücher, overcame a 72,000-strong French army in...
Powers of attorney: What they are and how they work
     A power of attorney (POA) doesn’t refer to a lawyer. Rather, a POA is a legal document that you (the principal) can use to delegate your wishes to a trusted agent who can act on your behalf in legal, financial, or health care matters.   This delegation of power is typically used when you’re incapacitated, perhaps because of an illness...
Neo-Babylonian empire
  Neo-Babylonian empire, ancient Middle Eastern empire with its capital at Babylon. It dominated much of Southwest Asia from shortly after its founding in 626 bce until the defeat of its final king by the Persian king Cyrus the Great in 539 bce. Memory of this empire was preserved through the centuries by the biblical accounts of the deeds of one...
What is private credit? A guide to direct lending
     When investors look to yield-bearing assets in the alternative debt universe, it’s usually to pursue higher yields compared with traditional debt and fixed-income securities, and to achieve a deeper level of diversification beyond conventional stocks and bonds.   One alternative investment that’s grown considerably over the last few decades is private credit, a subset of the private debt market. The...