I need help on a question for a Music History course. I need to find out which of Beethoven's piano sonatas was the first to use Variations for the Finale. I've been looking through the scores and I think it might be the Finale in his 5th Sonata (op 10, No. 1), but I can't be sure unless I hear them, and I can't play piano to save my life. If you can help me out, PLEEEAASE reply. Thanks!
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Piano Sonatas
Collapse
X
-
On video, I have a performance of op.109 by Vladimir Ashkenazy, and so intense is it that during the variation movement, sweat pours from his forehead, onto the piano keys - it`s a wonder he kept his fingers from slipping. Watching this always makes me think of Clifford Curzon`s dislike of modern plastic keys, to the extent that he would sandpaper them down for extra grip!
------------------
Peter (PDG)
Comment
-
Originally posted by PDG:
On video, I have a performance of op.109 by Vladimir Ashkenazy, and so intense is it that during the variation movement, sweat pours from his forehead, onto the piano keys - it`s a wonder he kept his fingers from slipping. Watching this always makes me think of Clifford Curzon`s dislike of modern plastic keys, to the extent that he would sandpaper them down for extra grip!
------------------
'Man know thyself''Man know thyself'
Comment
Comment