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Ludwig van Beethoven

Sonata No. 23 in F minor, Op. 57, "Appassionata"  Play

Karen Hakobyan Piano

Recorded on 04/02/2014, uploaded on 04/02/2014

Musician's or Publisher's Notes

One of the best-known piano sonatas, “Appassionata” did not get its nickname from the composer, though it accurately suggests the defining character of the piece. Both the opening movement and the finale are in sonata form which is unusual for a three movement sonata. The first movement is full of extreme dynamic contrasts, harmonic surprises, wide use of range/sonorities, and expressive silences which give it an orchestral grandeur. The second movement is based on a contemplative theme and develops with increasingly agitated variations. It ends with a more elaborate reprise of the opening which leads into the virtuoso, furious finale without interruption.

“If Beethoven, who was so fond of portraying scenes from nature, was perhaps thinking of ocean waves on a stormy night when from the distance a cry for help is heard, then such a picture will give the pianist a guide to the correct playing of this great tonal painting,” wrote Beethoven’s virtuoso pupil Carl Czerny about the work’s finale.      Karén Hakobyan

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Piano Sonata No. 23 in F minor "Appassionata"      Ludwig van Beethoven

The Piano Sonata No. 23 in F minor, commonly known as the Appassionata, is considered to be one of the three great piano sonatas of Beethoven's middle period. The sonata was composed during 1803-05, published in 1807 and dedicated to Count Franz von Brunswick. The name Appassionata was, like many of his other sonatas, not given to the work by Beethoven himself. It was actually the publisher of a four-hand edition that gave the Piano Sonata No. 23 the name it is most known by today.

Beethoven himself described the work as his most tempestuous piano sonata prior to the colossal Hammerklavier Sonata composed in 1817-1818. In 1802, Beethoven wrote the famous Heiligenstadt Testament, a letter of despair to his brothers over his increasing deafness. Beethoven, however, came to terms with his ailment and determined to fulfill his artistic destiny no matter his physical circumstances. The compositions that immediately followed this event include the epic Eroica Symphony, as well as the Waldstein and Appassionata sonatas. These works not only mark the beginning of Beethoven's mature compositions but also herald the forthcoming Romantic period.

The entire sonata is pervaded by the use of Neapolitan harmonies (a major triad a half-step above the tonic), a compositional trait it shares with Johannes Brahms' Piano Quintet in the same key. Immediately following the initial statement of the first movement's principal theme, it is repeated in the foreign key of G flat major, being the Neapolitan key to the tonic of F minor. The movement is another example of Beethoven's expansive sonata forms. Like the Waldstein before it, the coda is quite extensive.

The slow movement begins in the key of D flat major, being the dominant key of G flat major and in a Neapolitan relationship to C, the dominant of F minor. The theme of the second movement is austere to say the least, consisting almost entirely of common chords. Yet, what beauty and ornaments Beethoven is able to bestow upon such a crude theme in the following variations! Four variations follow the theme, the last of which is a restatement of the theme itself in different registers of the piano. It concludes deceptively on a diminished 7th chord that serves as a transition to the finale.

Like the first movement, the finale makes significant use of Neapolitan harmonies. It begins with an almost restrained energy with driving scales and arpeggios in the right hand accompanying a rhythmically volatile motif in the left. The energy of the finale is unrelenting, pausing only briefly during the written-out cadenzas and even increases at the faster tempo coda. Donald Tovey remarked that the Appassionata is one of the few examples in Beethoven's sonatas that end in tragedy.

Joseph DuBose

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