Violin Sonata No.9 in A Major , Op.47 (Kreutzer)

I.Adagio sostenuto , Presto

II.Andante con variazioni

III.Presto

اویتا آراکلیان، ویولن

سروش صادقی، پیانو

 

The Kreutzer” Sonata is an extraordinary work. Performing it, the performer always struck by the sheer energy and control necessary for the bursts of emotional intensity, with running notes, melodic lines, and dialogue with the piano. These qualities, combined with the extremely challenging technical demands, become mental and physical stretch exercises for the performers.
 
The first movement best exemplifies Beethoven’s own description on the manuscript: Sonata for piano and violin obbligato, written in a very concertante style, brilliant (this crossed out by Beethoven in the manuscript), quasi concerto-like.”  
The introductory Adagio Sostenuto, opens with a choral-like phrase, initially by the violin and then followed by the piano. This movement is really almost entirely in a minor mode, contradicting the major key indicated in the title, Sonata in A Major, leaving the opening violin phrase the only obvious” A major phrase of the movement. The Second Movement, Andante con Variazioni, is a set with four variations, mostly in F major. Considering that this is a slow” movement, Beethoven nonetheless incorporated much humor throughout, with his off-beats, pizzicatos, continuous trills, etc. 
 
The last movement, Presto, was written originally about a year before, and was to be the last movement of another piano-violin sonata – Sonata in A Major, Op. 30, No. 1. Beethoven ended up writing a set of variations for the earlier work instead, and recycled the original for use in the Kreutzer” Sonata.


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