I want to relax a day or so from Bonn/Modena posts and thought I'd post on views contained within an article written by the pianist Alfred Brendel entitled 'Beethoven's New Style'.
He writes -
''in his (Beethoven's) late works baroque influences are more evident than before. This polyphony 'turns the bass into melody' according to Walter Riezler and provides in some of his late sonatas, his B flat quartet, the Diabelli Variations, the Missa Solemnis, the finale of the 9th, climaxes with the aid of fugal form. Other baroque features are the recitative (sometimes richly ornamented), the aria and the chaconne. One of Beethoven's uncompromising traits is his use of clashing seconds. This had already been apparent in the 'Lebewohl' Sonata Op.81a where the telescoping of the horn calls depicts the disappearance of the coach and aroused misgivings among critics well in to the 19th century. Nor is Beethoven afraid of writing false relations. Another feature is the wide separation of registers, of treble and bass.
Sonata Op.101
Op.101 marks a fundamental change in Beethoven's piano sonatas. Now the dynamic, developmental aspect takes over the entire work. The rondo form is now abandoned. Although the finale is a sonata form its imitative polyphony is agglomerated, in the development section, into a fugue.
Sonata Op.106
Here, in this work I must confess that to me Beethoven's metronome marks do not, even in conception seem wholly appropriate to the character of the movements, with the possible exception of the Largo introduction to the fugue. The indication of 138 for the first movement is, by any player, and on any piano, simply not workable - not for nothing did Beethoven himself change his own mind about the original 'Allegro assai', deleting the 'assai'.
The first London printing of this sonata which appeared almost simulataneously with that of Artaria in Vienna offers by comparison several interesting corrections and alternatives. Beethoven himself allowed the option of interchanging the inner movements at will or even omitting the Largo before the fugue, suggestions that seem to defy sanity.
Sonatas Opp.109, 110 and 111
All three of the last sonatas have in common a new way of ending. Op.109 withdraws into an inner world, Op.110 ends in euphoric self-immobilation, while Op.111 surrenders itself to silence.
The third movement of Op.110 is Passion music - a complex of baroque forms in which ariosi and fugues are interwoven. The first part of the fugue attempts to counteract the 'lamenting song' which, it has been noted, bears resemblance to the aria 'It is finished' from Bach's St John Passion.
Beethoven's C Minor Sonata Op.111 leaves a dual impression. Its two movements confront one another as thesis and antithesis. Attempts at interpretation such as 'Samsara and Nirvana' (Bulow), the 'worldly and otherworldly' (Fischer), 'Resistance and Submission' (Lenz) or the masculine and feminine principles which Beethoven himself was so fond of expounding.
The forms with the most compelling animation in this sonata are sonata and fugue - the Allegro of Op.111 is a sonata form suffused with fugal elements.
(from Alfred Brendel's 'Music Sounded Out'
-1990).
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