It's widely accepted that Beethoven developed the classical sonata form beyond Mozart and Haydn to where the idiom was essentially exhausted of the possibility of further development. Charles Rosen (The Classical Style) has made the point that Beethoven's earlier pieces were often in a less classical form (regarding tonic/dominant relationships) and often closer to the emerging "Romantic" style, but that, perhaps around the time of the Appassionata, he made a definite shift BACK to classical form. My question is, why did LvB pursue what could be seen as a reactionary or backward movement to classical sonata form instead of continuing his development of the new Romantic style? What does this say about Beethoven the composer, and also about the classical style itself, that he chose to exploit IT rather than to develop along different lines.
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