I've been reading on another board peoples' comments about this extraordinary work, then listening to Schiff's analytical lecture (audio) from Wigmore Hall. I found some of what Schiff had to say descriptive rather than revelatory. He used all the superlatives about Beethoven, this great work and its connection to others in the same key - but I was left underwhelmed about what Beethoven's form and technique reveals to us about this sonata, Beethoven's final utterance in the genre. Nothing about his use of dissonance, just some mention of diminished 7ths - but WHAT was behind those Dim 7ths and why such a radical departure from even the few sonatas earlier (it only has 2 movements)? What, if any, is the connection with this and other very late sonatas and, say, the late string quartets? At one point he said 'using both ends of the keyboard, representing reaching for the stars and then also the depths'. This was vaguely enigmatic to me - if not actively rhetorical - because it didn't really tell me anything. Perhaps I expect too much from a program designed for more general audiences?
Anyway, on the performance side of this work, some have suggested that Brendel's Philips recording of it is the most 'intellectual'. What do you think can be meant by this? How can a piano sonata differ in interpretative attack from 'intellectual' to 'passionate' (just say)? What are the markers of difference, or are these too abstract/discrete to be easily divined?
I've come back to edit this because I realized I misled with my comments about Op. 111 having just 2 movements and that's what made it a 'radical departure'. There were, of course, other sonatas of Beethoven written with just two movements; example, 19 and 20. However, Op. 111 is unique in that Beethoven became more expansive in his conception of the sonata - 'symphonic' if you like - with each successive composition and yet, paradoxically, he chose the form of 2 movements for his last. His radical ideas had evolved through a succession of later works.
Anyway, on the performance side of this work, some have suggested that Brendel's Philips recording of it is the most 'intellectual'. What do you think can be meant by this? How can a piano sonata differ in interpretative attack from 'intellectual' to 'passionate' (just say)? What are the markers of difference, or are these too abstract/discrete to be easily divined?
I've come back to edit this because I realized I misled with my comments about Op. 111 having just 2 movements and that's what made it a 'radical departure'. There were, of course, other sonatas of Beethoven written with just two movements; example, 19 and 20. However, Op. 111 is unique in that Beethoven became more expansive in his conception of the sonata - 'symphonic' if you like - with each successive composition and yet, paradoxically, he chose the form of 2 movements for his last. His radical ideas had evolved through a succession of later works.
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