The Piano Sonata No. 21 in C major, Op. 53, also known as the Waldstein, is considered to be one of Beethoven's greatest piano sonatas, as well as one of the three particularly notable sonatas of his middle period (the other two being the Appassionata sonata, Op. 57, and Les Adieux, Op. 81a). The sonata was completed in the summer of 1804. The work has a scope that surpasses Beethoven's previous piano sonatas, and is notably one of his most technically challenging compositions. It is a key work early in his 'Heroic' decade (1803-1812) and set the stage for piano compositions in the grand manner both in Beethoven's later work and all future composers.
The Waldstein receives its name from Beethoven's dedication to Count Ferdinand Ernst Gabriel von Waldstein of Vienna, a patron as well as a close personal friend of Beethoven's. Like the Archduke Trio (one of many pieces dedicated to Archduke Rudolph), this one bears Waldstein's name though there are other works dedicated to him. This sonata is also known as 'L'Aurora' (The Dawn) in Italian, for the sonority of the opening chords of the third movement, which conjures an image of daybreak.
Contents |
The Waldstein has three movements:
The two outer movements of the sonata are most substantial, each taking about 11 minutes to perform.
The sonata opens with repeated chords, played pianissimo. This initial straightforward, but anxious rhythm is devoid of melody for two bars. It then swiftly ascends and follows with a three-note descent in the middle register and a four-note descent in the upper. More of this teasing rhythm rumbles forward, until 45 seconds later, when the notes seem to almost stumble over themselves.
The second subject group, marked dolce, is a sweet chordal theme in E major. Though not unprecedented (the first movement of the Op. 31 No. 1 sonata also has a second group in the mediant), this was the first major work in which Beethoven had chosen to modulate elsewhere than the customary fifth up for the second group, an idea to which he would return later (in the Hammerklavier Sonata, for example).
For the recapitulation, Beethoven transposes the second subject into A major, which quickly changes into A minor and then back to C major again. The movement ends in a heavy coda.
The Introduzione is a short Adagio set in jutting 6/8 time which serves as an introduction to the third movement. At once halting, angular, and tranquil, the music gradually gets more agitated before calming down to segue into the Rondo. This Introduzione replaced an earlier, longer middle movement, which was later published separately as the Andante Favori, WoO 57.
The Rondo begins with a sweet and consoling tune played pianissimo, which soon comes back fortissimo, over daringly fast scales in the left hand and a continuous trill on the dominant in the right. Beethoven then introduces the second theme—a series of broken chords in triplets—but soon interrupts it with a turbulent section in A minor that foreshadows the central episode.
Soon the music returns to C major, and the sweet theme is repeated before being followed by a series of staccato octaves in C minor that mark the start of the central episode, one of the few cases where such melodic change is seen, a theme repeated in larger works like the Emperor Piano Concerto. Soon the octaves are accompanied by swirling triplets in first the left and then right hands; the music grows more tense and eventually cadences in C minor. The next section brings back the opening theme in chord form and further develops it - it is first heard in A-flat major (bars 221 - 224), then in F minor (bars 225 - 228), and then in D-flat major (bars 229 - 232), at which point the theme is fragmented into shorter phrases (233 pickup - 238) and then transitions into a more quiet and almost mysterious section, which returns after much drama to the C major theme, which is then played in a triumphant fortissimo.
The second theme reappears, followed by another long line of beautiful dance-like music, which is perfectly characteristic of Beethoven. Another series of fortissimo chords is struck, ushering in a short, delicate pianissimo section, and the movement seems to die away, but then unexpectedly segues into the Prestissimo coda, a wondrous section that plays with the various themes of the movement and more before ending in a triumphant rush of grandeur.
The piece is briefly referenced in the episode "The Pez Dispenser" of the popular sitcom Seinfeld, in which George is wild over his new romance with a pianist, Noel, who ultimately ends the relationship over Elaine's laughing, all stemmed from Jerry's seemingly-innocent placement of a Pez Dispenser on Elaine's leg during one of Noel's solo recitals.
This piece is also played by Jane Fairfax in BBC's "Emma", Episode 2.
Helena Bonham Carter plays excerpts from the 2nd and 3rd movements of this piece in James Ivory's film adaptation of E.M. Forster's "A Room with a View".
The third-season House episode "Half-Wit" opens with Dave Matthews' character Patrick performing the first movement and later has him mimicking playing the third as he gets a CAT scan.
It is used in the soundtrack for SimCopter.