CCSH Sonata Hob XVI 34 Edizione: Beardmore & Birchall 1783 Play Play
Wilhelm Backhaus
Piano
Recorded on 02/02/2012, uploaded on 02/02/2012
Musician's or Publisher's Notes
Istituto Europeo di Musica. Dipartimento di pianoforte. Ciclo completo delle Sonate di Haydn
The music published in our channel is exclusively dedicated to divulgation purposes and not commercial. This within a program shared to study classic educational music of the 1900's (mostly european).
Haydn’s Piano Sonatas: a Philosophy of Taste
The CCSH (Ciclo Completo delle Sonate di Haydn per pianoforte) is a major publishing undertaking of the european publisher Istituto Europeo di Musica Press. IEM-Piano Department carried out a long research (1997/2002-2005/2011) into the Haydn’s Piano Sonatas (“Cinquantadue Sonate per pianoforte di Joseph Franz Haydn”) and into disk-recording, tape recording and Live Recording. In 52 Piano Sonatas, Joseph Franz Haydn’s views on aesthetic theory and the Forma Sonata are to be found in his work on Taste. His Music-theory of “Forma Sonata” is not entirely original, but his arguments generally display the keen analysis typical of his best work. In 52 Piano Sonate, Haydn retains the idea that the values within the scope of criticism are essentially pleasures of the human imagination. For Handel the “Forma Sonata” is a manifestation of music-taste that is immediate and spontaneous, yet the application of“good sense” and “reason” improves it. Music-Taste is not improved by reasoning from a priori normative principles. The “Forma Sonata” involves reason in the sense of “sound understanding,” which ultimately depends on imaginative associations of ideas. Haydn defends the centrality of sentiment with the following reasoning. If the discriminations of Music-taste took place without these sentiments, we would lack any motivation to do what we regard as moral. In Haydn’s Piano Sonata, moral and aesthetic judgments have practical consequences that mere reason lacks. Haydn's contrast of vulgar and refined taste parallels his general treatment of the doxastic positions of the vulgar. Vulgar thinking is dominated by the first influence of general rules upon the mind. For Handel, the “Forma Sonata” is a contributing excellence and not the sole focus of aesthetic discrimination.
Next Publication in April 2012: Sonata Hob XVI: 1
Hob:XVI:34
1778
Sonata in mi minore
Presto
Adagio (sol maggiore)
Finale. Molto vivace
Organico: clavicembalo o pianoforte solo Edizione: Beardmore & Birchall, Londra, 1783
Classical Music | Piano Music
Franz Joseph Haydn
CCSH Sonata Hob XVI 34 Edizione: Beardmore & Birchall 1783 Play
Recorded on 02/02/2012, uploaded on 02/02/2012
Musician's or Publisher's Notes
Istituto Europeo di Musica. Dipartimento di pianoforte. Ciclo completo delle Sonate di Haydn
The music published in our channel is exclusively dedicated to divulgation purposes and not commercial. This within a program shared to study classic educational music of the 1900's (mostly european).
Haydn’s Piano Sonatas: a Philosophy of Taste
The CCSH (Ciclo Completo delle Sonate di Haydn per pianoforte) is a major publishing undertaking of the european publisher Istituto Europeo di Musica Press. IEM-Piano Department carried out a long research (1997/2002-2005/2011) into the Haydn’s Piano Sonatas (“Cinquantadue Sonate per pianoforte di Joseph Franz Haydn”) and into disk-recording, tape recording and Live Recording. In 52 Piano Sonatas, Joseph Franz Haydn’s views on aesthetic theory and the Forma Sonata are to be found in his work on Taste. His Music-theory of “Forma Sonata” is not entirely original, but his arguments generally display the keen analysis typical of his best work. In 52 Piano Sonate, Haydn retains the idea that the values within the scope of criticism are essentially pleasures of the human imagination. For Handel the “Forma Sonata” is a manifestation of music-taste that is immediate and spontaneous, yet the application of“good sense” and “reason” improves it. Music-Taste is not improved by reasoning from a priori normative principles. The “Forma Sonata” involves reason in the sense of “sound understanding,” which ultimately depends on imaginative associations of ideas. Haydn defends the centrality of sentiment with the following reasoning. If the discriminations of Music-taste took place without these sentiments, we would lack any motivation to do what we regard as moral. In Haydn’s Piano Sonata, moral and aesthetic judgments have practical consequences that mere reason lacks. Haydn's contrast of vulgar and refined taste parallels his general treatment of the doxastic positions of the vulgar. Vulgar thinking is dominated by the first influence of general rules upon the mind. For Handel, the “Forma Sonata” is a contributing excellence and not the sole focus of aesthetic discrimination.
Next Publication in April 2012: Sonata Hob XVI: 1
Edizione: Beardmore & Birchall, Londra, 1783
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Concerto for Cello no 2 in D major, Op. 101/H 7b 2.mv.
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