Piano Sonata in G major, D. 894 (Schubert)

The Piano Sonata No. 18 in G major, D. 894 (Op. 78) by Franz Schubert is a sonata for solo piano, completed in October 1826. The work is sometimes called the "Fantaisie", a title which the publisher Tobias Haslinger gave to the first movement of the work, and not Schubert himself.[1] It was the last of Schubert's sonatas published during his lifetime, and was later described by Schumann as the "most perfect in form and conception" of any of Schubert's sonatas.[2]

Contents

The work is in four movements:

  1. Molto moderato e cantabile, G major
  2. Andante, D major
  3. Menuetto, Allegro moderato, B minor and B major
  4. Allegretto, G major

A typical performance runs approximately 35 minutes.

Mood and character

The English pianist and Schubert specialist Imogen Cooper has described the G major sonata as "one of the rare completely serene sonatas that he wrote," adding, "Of course, as ever with him, there are contrasting passages which become stormy and a little bit dark, but the overall mood is one of peace and luminosity, in a way that the G Major string quartet, written a few months before, was most definitely not." She noted further that "the last movement has tremendous wit in it — and one or two moments of great poignancy, as if a cloud suddenly covered the sun, and then the sun comes out again."[3]

Nicholas Marston has briefly discussed the character and features of the sonata's first movement in preparation for the movement's recapitulation.[4] Peter Pesic commented on Donald Francis Tovey's observation that Schubert used a "circle of sixths" series of key signatures in the fourth movement of this sonata, in the sequence G → E → B = C → G = A.[5]

Media

References

  1. ^ McCreless, Patrick (Spring 1997). "A Candidate for the Canon? A New Look at Schubert's Fantasie in C Major for Violin and Piano". 19th-Century Music 20 (3): 205–230. doi:10.1525/ncm.1997.20.3.02a00020. JSTOR 746862. 
  2. ^ Grant Hirosima, for LAPhil.com.
  3. ^ Imogen Cooper interview on BBC Radio 3, included in broadcast of Schubert piano recital on May 1, 2009
  4. ^ Marston, Nicholas (2000). "Schubert's Homecoming". Journal of the Royal Musical Association 125 (2): 248–270. doi:10.1093/jrma/125.2.248. JSTOR 3250671. 
  5. ^ Pesic, Peter (Autumn 1999). "Schubert's Dream". 19th-Century Music 23 (2): 136–144. doi:10.1525/ncm.1999.23.2.02a00020. JSTOR 746920. 

External links