Diabelli Variations, Op. 120, group of musical variations for solo piano by Ludwig van Beethoven, completed in 1823 and considered one of his monumental works for the instrument. By manipulating tempi, dynamics, and themes and by adding ornamentation, parodic elements, and references to the works of several other composers, Beethoven transformed a simple waltz into a work of impressive breadth and depth. The piece builds to a fugue in variation 32 and ends with an elegant closing minuet.
The composition—which Beethoven later dedicated to the young Austrian noblewoman Antonie Brentano—was inspired by Austrian music publisher and composer Anton Diabelli, who in 1819 wrote a waltz and, with the intention of publishing a book containing the theme and variations, asked dozens of composers to write a variation on his theme. Beethoven soon began to draft a response that included some 19 variations. These he set aside until 1822, when he resumed and then expanded to 33 the number of variations. When he had finished his work, he sent it off to be published as an independent composition. The variations Diabelli had solicited from the 50 other composers, including Franz Schubert and Franz Liszt (who was then not yet in his teens), were afterward published in a separate collection.