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Anthem of Europe

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European Anthem[1][2]

Official anthem of theCouncil of Europeand theEuropean Union
MusicLudwig van Beethoven,1824
Adopted1972 and 1985
Audio sample
"Ode to Joy" (instrumental)

TheAnthem of EuropeorEuropean Anthem,also known asOde to Joy,is a piece ofinstrumental musicadapted from the prelude of the finalmovementofBeethoven's9th Symphonycomposed in 1823, originally set to words adapted fromFriedrich Schiller's 1785 poem "Ode to Joy".In 1972, theCouncil of Europeadopted it as an anthem to representEurope,[3][4]and later in 1985 it was also adopted by theEuropean Union.[1][2]

Its purpose is to honour sharedEuropean values.The EU describes it as expressing the ideals of freedom, peace and solidarity.[2]The anthem is played on official occasions such as political or civil events.[2]

History[edit]

ComposerLudwig van Beethoven

Friedrich Schillerwrote the poem "An die Freude"(" To Joy ") in 1785 as a" celebration of the brotherhood of man ".[5]In later life, the poet was contemptuous of this popularity and dismissed the poem as typical of "the bad taste of the age" in which it had been written.[6]After Schiller's death, the poem provided the words for the choral movement ofLudwig van Beethoven's9th Symphony.

In 1971 theParliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europedecided to propose adopting the prelude to the "Ode to Joy" fromBeethoven's9th Symphonyas the anthem, taking up a suggestion made byRichard von Coudenhove-Kalergiin 1955.[7]Beethoven was generally seen as the natural choice for a European anthem. TheCommittee of Ministers of the Council of Europeofficially announced the European Anthem on 19 January 1972 at Strasbourg: the prelude to "Ode to Joy", 4th movement of Ludwig van Beethoven's 9th symphony.

ConductorHerbert von Karajanwas asked to write three instrumental arrangements – for solo piano, for wind instruments and for symphony orchestra and he conducted the performance used to make the official recording. Karajan decided on a decidedly slower tempo, usingcrotchet(quarter note) = 120 whereas Beethoven had writtenminim(half note) = 80.[8][9]

The anthem was launched via a major information campaign onEurope Dayin 1972, without a public holiday, since it is close toMay Day.[citation needed]In 1985, it was adopted by EU heads of state and government as the official anthem of the then European Community – since 1993 the European Union. It is not intended to replace the national anthems of the member states but rather to celebrate the values they all share and theirunity in diversity.It expresses the ideals of a united Europe: freedom, peace, and solidarity.[10]

It was to have been included in theEuropean Constitutionalong with the otherEuropean symbols;however, the treaty failed ratification and was replaced by theTreaty of Lisbon,which does not include any symbols.[11]A declaration was attached to the treaty, in which sixteen member states formally recognised the proposed symbols.[12]In response, theEuropean Parliamentdecided that it would make greater use of the anthem, for example at official occasions.[11]In October 2008, the Parliament changed its rules of procedure to have the anthem played at the opening of Parliament after elections and at formal sittings.[13]

Usage[edit]

"Ode to Joy" is the anthem of theCouncil of Europe (CoE)and theEuropean Union (EU).In the context of the CoE, the anthem is used to represent all of Europe. In the context of the EU, the anthem is used to represent the union and its people. It is used on occasions such as Europe Day and formal events such as the signing of treaties. The European Parliament seeks to make greater use of the music; then-Parliament PresidentHans-Gert Pötteringstated he was moved when the anthem was played for him on his visit to Israel and ought to be used in Europe more often.[11]

The German public radio stationDeutschlandfunkhas broadcast the anthem together with theDeutschlandliedshortly before midnight since New Year's Eve 2006. The two anthems were specially recorded by theBerlin Radio Symphony Orchestrain versions characterized by "modesty and intensity".[14]

At the 2007signing ceremonyfor theTreaty of Lisbon,theplenipotentiariesof the European Union's twenty-seven member states stood in attendance while the "Ode to Joy" was played and a choir of 26 Portuguese children sang the original German lyrics.[15]

In 2008 it was used byKosovoasits national anthemuntil it adopted its own, and it was played atits declaration of independence,as a nod to the EU's role in its independence from Serbia.[16]

"Ode to Joy", automatically orchestrated in seven different styles, was used on 18 June 2015 during the ceremony celebrating the 5000th ERC grantee as anthem of theEuropean Research Councilto represent achievements of European research.[17]

"Ode to Joy" is used as the theme song to the2016 UEFA Euro qualifyingand theEuropean qualifying of the 2018 FIFA World Cupfootball competition at the introduction of every match.[18]

In 2017, members of theParliament of the United Kingdomfrom theScottish National Partyfirst whistled and then sang "Ode to Joy" during a vote at theHouse of Commonsto protest againstBrexit.[19]

In 2018, the anthem of Japan and the anthem of the EU were performed in Tokyo during the official signing of theEU-Japan Economic Partnership Agreement.[20]The European anthem is often played at the signing of official economic or political agreements with foreign governments. In 2023, it was played after the anthem of Ukraine during President of UkraineVolodymyr Zelenskyy's visit to the EU parliament.

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ab"The European Anthem".Council of Europe.Retrieved4 August2022.
  2. ^abcd"European Anthem".Europa.Archivedfrom the original on 15 August 2010.Retrieved29 August2010.
  3. ^"The European anthem - The Council of Europe in brief - coe.int".
  4. ^"Council of Europe: The European Flag and Anthem".4 February 2014.
  5. ^Rudolf, Max;Stern, Michael;White, Hanny Bleeker (2001)."Beethoven'sAn die Freudeand Two Mysterious Footnotes ".A Musical Life: Writings and Letters.Pendragon Press. pp. 267–268.ISBN9781576470381.Retrieved10 July2008.
  6. ^SchillerandKörner(1849).Correspondence of Schiller with Körner.Translated by Leonard Simpson. London: Richard Bentley. p.221.Retrieved9 July2008.ode-to-joy schiller bad-poem.
  7. ^"Letter to Paul Levy, 3 August 1955"(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2 April 2009.
  8. ^Story of the European Anthem:https:// europarl.europa.eu/RegData/etudes/BRIE/2021/690568/EPRS_BRI(2021)690568_EN.pdf
  9. ^Buch, Esteban (2003).Beethoven's Ninth: a political history.Translated by Miller, Richard. Internet Archive.University of Chicago Press.p. 241.ISBN978-0-226-07812-0.
  10. ^"The Council of Europe: Guardian of Human Rights, Democracy and the Rule of Law for 700 million citizens".Council of Europe.Archived fromthe originalon 30 October 2009.Retrieved4 August2022.
  11. ^abcBeunderman, Mark (11 July 2007)."MEPs defy member states on EU symbols".EUobserver.Retrieved12 July2007.
  12. ^"Official Journal of the European Union, 2007 C 306–2, p. 267".
  13. ^Kubosova, Lucia (9 October 2008)."No prolonged mandate for Barroso, MEPs warn".EUobserver.Archivedfrom the original on 10 October 2008.Retrieved9 October2008.
  14. ^Sträßner, Matthias."Wer D singt, muss auch E singen"[Whoever sings D, must also sing E].Deutschlandfunk(in German).Retrieved1 November2018.
  15. ^Signing ceremony of the Treaty of Lisbon (Full) 1/6onYouTube
  16. ^"Kosovo declares independence".USA Today.17 February 2008.Retrieved12 March2008.
  17. ^Machine Learning Techniques for Reorchestrating the European AnthemonYouTube
  18. ^European Qualifiers Intro – UEFA EURO 2016onYouTube
  19. ^"The SNP staged a musical protest as MPs voted on whether to trigger Article 50".Independent.co.uk.8 February 2017.Archivedfrom the original on 7 May 2022.
  20. ^"Official welcome ceremony, EU-Japan summit, Tokyo".consilium.europa.eu.17 July 2018.Archivedfrom the original on 18 October 2018.Retrieved30 March2021.

See also[edit]

External links[edit]