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VIOLIN SONATAS
Beethoven's first Sonatas for violin and piano Op. 12/1-3, composed during the years 1797 and 1798, contain unmistakable elements of his later composition style, which challenged his contemporariesâ critical taste accordingly. The violin sonatas No. 4 Op. 23 and No. 5 Op. 24 and their composition correlate, according to findings of musicologists, closely with Beethovenâs own relationships. The former one seems to portray the darker side of love, its unfulfillment, whereas the later so-called âspring sonataâ â as a sort of characterization of a loving heartâs feeling of spring â references the sweet, beautiful aspects of love. The three sonatas Op. 30/1-3, composed in 1802, the year when he also wrote the âHeiligenstĂ€dter Testamentâ, reflect Beethovenâs emotional state and are characterized by heavy mood swings. Maybe the most famous work is the âKreutzerâ sonata No. 9 in A major Op. 47, once termed unplayable by its dedicatee, the French violinist Rodolphe Kreutzer. By contrast, Beethovenâs final violin sonata No. 10 in G major Op. 96 seems more heartfelt in tone and was praised by critics as the âmost poetic and musically most sensitively craftedâ of his sonatas. Thomas Albertus Irnberger and Michael Korstick furthermore present the variations âSe vuol ballareâ WoO 40 on a theme from the opera Le nozze di Figaro by W. A. Mozart. The Rondo in G major, WoO 41, and the Six German Dances, WoO 42, were written in 1794/96 and convey ease and almost juvenile cheerfulness â a trait also prevalent in the interpretation of Irnberger and Korstick.
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Beethoven's first Sonatas for violin and piano Op. 12/1-3, composed during the years 1797 and 1798, contain unmistakable elements of his later composition style, which challenged his contemporariesâ critical taste accordingly. The violin sonatas No. 4 Op. 23 and No. 5 Op. 24 and their composition correlate, according to findings of musicologists, closely with Beethovenâs own relationships. The former one seems to portray the darker side of love, its unfulfillment, whereas the later so-called âspring sonataâ â as a sort of characterization of a loving heartâs feeling of spring â references the sweet, beautiful aspects of love. The three sonatas Op. 30/1-3, composed in 1802, the year when he also wrote the âHeiligenstĂ€dter Testamentâ, reflect Beethovenâs emotional state and are characterized by heavy mood swings. Maybe the most famous work is the âKreutzerâ sonata No. 9 in A major Op. 47, once termed unplayable by its dedicatee, the French violinist Rodolphe Kreutzer. By contrast, Beethovenâs final violin sonata No. 10 in G major Op. 96 seems more heartfelt in tone and was praised by critics as the âmost poetic and musically most sensitively craftedâ of his sonatas. Thomas Albertus Irnberger and Michael Korstick furthermore present the variations âSe vuol ballareâ WoO 40 on a theme from the opera Le nozze di Figaro by W. A. Mozart. The Rondo in G major, WoO 41, and the Six German Dances, WoO 42, were written in 1794/96 and convey ease and almost juvenile cheerfulness â a trait also prevalent in the interpretation of Irnberger and Korstick.













