Barenboim on Beethoven 11: Beethoven's Last Sonata I: a film by Christopher Nupen

If we had never heard Beethoven's music before and decided to look at his final piano sonata, Op. 111, alongside his very first, we would be floored by the differences in tonal and formal expansiveness, motivic spontaneity, and compositional architecture--it might even seem unbelievable that th...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Beethoven, Ludwig van 1770-1827
Format: Electronic Video
Language:English
Published: [Place of publication not identified] Allegro Films 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:BSB01
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Summary:If we had never heard Beethoven's music before and decided to look at his final piano sonata, Op. 111, alongside his very first, we would be floored by the differences in tonal and formal expansiveness, motivic spontaneity, and compositional architecture--it might even seem unbelievable that the works had come from the pen of one composer. But Barenboim, having already taken us through middle-period Beethoven--the "Waldstein," the "Appasionata", the Eroica--argues that the "unmistakable quality" of the late works represents "a logical development of his whole life's work." This chapter of Barenboim on Beethoven focuses on the final sonata's first movement, "some of the tensest music he ever wrote" in which he proves himself "a master of small forms.
Physical Description:1 Online-Ressource (1 video file (25 min., 52 sec.)) sound, color

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