Piano Sonata No. 9 (Beethoven)

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Beethoven in 1801, painted by Carl Traugott Riedel Beethoven Riedel 1801.jpg
Beethoven in 1801, painted by Carl Traugott Riedel

Form

The sonata is in three movements:

  1. Allegro in E major
  2. Allegretto in E minor with a trio in C major (which returns in the coda)
  3. Rondo – Allegro comodo in E major.

Analysis

The first movement

Sonata No. 9 1st Movement.png

The first movement opens with a series of ascending fourths in the right hand, followed by a quartet-like echoing of a phrase in different octaves. The second theme, in B major, is based on a descending run followed by an ascending chromatic run. The development is full of sixteenth-note arpeggios in the left hand, and sixteenth-note left-hand scales accompany the start of the recapitulation, but the movement ends quietly.

The second movement

Sonata No. 9 2st Movement.png

The second movement is minuet-like; the main section ends on the tonic major chord. The first time, this leads without intermediate modulation to the trio, headed Maggiore, in C; after its return, the coda briefly quotes the C major tune before returning to E minor. Anton Schindler recalled that Beethoven would play the E-minor section furiously, before pausing at length on the E-major chord and giving a calmer account of the Maggiore. [1]

The third movement

Sonata No. 9 3st Movement.png

The third movement is in a lively sonata rondo form. On its final return, the main theme is syncopated against triplets.

Not withstanding its seeming simplicity, this sonata introduces the "Sturm und Drang" character that became so commonly identified with Beethoven. He adds drama both in the contrast between the lyrical passages that follow very active, textured thematic sections. Furthermore, the contrasting dynamics and variation between major and minor, between using the parallel minor and the subdominant of its relative major (E minor to C major). These were new techniques that offer a hint of the innovations that Beethoven brought to end the Classical era and begin the Romantic era.

Critical reception

The pianist and musicologist Charles Rosen considers both of the Opus 14 sonatas to be "considerably more modest than their predecessors", "destined for use in the home" and with "few technical difficulties". [2] However, in contrast, pianist András Schiff disagrees with the notion that "the Opus 14 sonatas are lighter or easier" and in his lecture on Opus 14 No. 1 (see below), he states that they are frightfully difficult to play and to interpret.

Version for string quartet

According to Donald Francis Tovey, the instrumentation of this sonata for string quartet is “one of the most interesting documents in the history of Beethoven’s art… There is hardly a bar of the quartet-version that does not shed some light on the nature of the pianoforte, of quartet-writing and of the general structure of music… he takes one of his smallest sonatas and shows [...] that hardly a bar of pianoforte music can be turned into good quartet-writing without quantities of new material besides drastic transformation of the old.” [3] Tovey singles out the opening of the Allegretto second movement as an example not only of what Beethoven adds, but also of what he leaves out in re-imagining the piano sound for strings:

Beethoven, Sonata, Op. 14 No. 1, 2nd movement, bars 1-8, Quartet version
Piano Sonata No. 9 (Beethoven)
Beethoven, Op. 14 No. 1, 2nd movement, bars 1–8, Quartet version

“Beethoven shows his profoundest insight in not allowing the four stringed instruments to reproduce the thick pianoforte chords, though this would be possible with quite easy double stops.” [4]

References and sources

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References

  1. Behrend, p. 46
  2. Rosen, p. 144
  3. Tovey, D.F. (1931, p. 70) A Companion to Beethoven’s Pianoforte Sonatas. London, Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music.
  4. Tovey, D.F. (1931, p. 73) A Companion to Beethoven’s Pianoforte Sonatas. London, Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music.

Sources

Further reading