The First Freelancer: How Beethoven Built a Career Without a Salary
Vienna, 1792. Beethoven arrives with a letter of introduction and the unspoken expectation that he'll do what every serious musician before him had done: find a wealthy household to serve, compose on demand, and be grateful for the security.
Haydn had done it for thirty years. Mozart had tried to escape it and spent the rest of his life financially exposed. The system was clear, and it worked - for everyone except the composer.
Beethoven decided the rules were negotiable.
What followed wasn't luck or temperament. It was strategy.
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To See Them Is to Begin to Know Them
Bach died in 1750 relatively obscure, his manuscripts scattered, some reportedly used as wrapping paper. For nearly eighty years, the world moved on. Then a 20-year-old named Mendelssohn found a surviving score and performed it — and everything changed. This is the story of what almost didn't survive, and why putting a face to a name matters more than you might think.
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History Gave Us Thousands of Giants. The Market Gave Us Twenty. Until Now.
You know who Kepler is. At some point you decided you'd like a quality portrait of him — something worth putting on a wall. So you looked. And you found a few mediocre options, maybe one decent print buried in a corner of a generic poster site, and a lot of nothing. That's the problem LegendSketch was built to fix.
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