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Help Beethoven! You may have noticed that the Google Doodle today is pretty spectacular

Remember when Google just changed around the letters on their homepage a little bit? Well, they'v...
Newstalk
Newstalk

12.23 17 Dec 2015


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Help Beethoven! You may have n...

Help Beethoven! You may have noticed that the Google Doodle today is pretty spectacular

Newstalk
Newstalk

12.23 17 Dec 2015


Share this article


Remember when Google just changed around the letters on their homepage a little bit? Well, they've come a long way from there and every day they delight us with a new doodle.

Today's celebrates the 245th birthday of Ludwig van Beethoven.

The doodle asks the user to "help Beethoven's unfortunate journey to the symphony hall by arranging his masterpieces in time for the big crescendo."

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The below describes the reason how and why they decided to celebrate his birthday today.

"Even when you’re the preeminent musical genius of your generation, sometimes you just step in it. So begins Beethoven’s trip to the symphony hall in today’s musical puzzle, which Leon Hong created in collaboration with artist Nate Swinehart and engineers Jonathan Shneier and Jordan Thompson. It happens that our story isn’t much of a stretch in the broader context of Ludwig van Beethoven’s life, which saw more than its share of rotten luck.

Ludwig’s father, a middling singer in the Elector’s court and a man too often in his cups, pulled the precocious child out of school at the age of ten in hopes of earning some money on the shoulders of his talent (as a result, his handwriting was so bad that musicologists still struggle to authenticate his signature). He lost two siblings prematurely, had to assume full responsibility for his family as a teenager, fell madly for unrequiting lovers twice, and, most famously, began losing his hearing at the peak of his career.

Despite all of this, Beethoven’s music prevailed. As Mozart reputedly said, “one day, [that boy] will give the world something to talk about.” That he certainly did. Sure, he may have raised his voice a few times, but he could overwhelm his friends with excessive kindness and generosity just the same. And while his romances brought him more anguish than happiness, would we have Für Elise or Moonlight Sonata if they hadn’t?

It’s unclear when Beethoven was actually born, but December 17th marks the 245th anniversary of his baptism. Today provided us a rare opportunity to construct a game in step with beautiful music, whose evocative moods, drama, lightness, and depth made conjuring visuals to match it rollickingly fun. Here’s to one of history’s greatest artists, and to hoping that, wherever you happen to be traveling this holiday, your life’s work isn’t eaten by a horse."


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