Ludwig van Beethoven (1770- 1827) The Three Last Sonatas Sonata No.30 in E Major, Opus 109 Sonata No.31 in A Fiat Major, Opus 110 Sonata No.32 in C Minor,...
Ludwig van Beethoven (1770- 1827)
The Three Last Sonatas
Sonata No.30 in E Major, Opus 109
Sonata No.31 in A Fiat Major, Opus 110
Sonata No.32 in C Minor, Opus 111
Ludwig van Beethoven was born in Bonn in
December, 1770, the son of Johann van Beethoven, a singer in the service of the
Archbishop of Cologne, and, more important, the grandson of Ludwig van
Beethoven, Kapellmeister to the same patron. It was perhaps the very
distinction and strength of character of the head of the family that lay at the
root of Johann van Beethoven's inadequacy as a father and final professional
incompetence. The elder Ludwig died in 1773, but was to remain for his grandson
a powerful posthumous influence, while Johann slid further into habits of
dissipation, with Ludwig, his eldest surviving son, assuming in 1789 the role
of head of the family, with responsibility for his two younger brothers.
In Bonn Beethoven received erratic
musical training at home, followed by a much more thorough course of study with
Christian Gottlob Neefe, who was appointed court organist in 1781. By 1784
Beethoven had entered the paid service of the Archbishop as deputy court
organist, employed as a viola-player or as cembalist in the court orchestra,
and turning his hand increasingly to composition. A visit to Vienna in 1788 for
the purpose of study with Mozart led to nothing, cut short by the illness and
subsequent death of his mother, but in 1792 he was to return to the imperial
capital, again with his patron's encouragement, to take lessons with Haydn.
Beethoven came to Vienna with the highest
recommendations and was quick to establish himself as a pianist and composer.
From Haydn he claimed to have learned nothing, but he was to undertake further
study with Johann Georg Albrechtsberger in counterpoint and with the court
Kapellmeister Antonio Salieri in vocal and dramatic setting. More important he
was to attach himself to a series of noble patrons who were to couple
generosity with forbearance throughout his life.
As a young composer in Bonn Beethoven had
followed the trends of his time; in Vienna he was increasingly to develop his
own unmistakable and original musical idiom, sometimes strange and uncouth by
the standards of the older generation, but suggesting completely new worlds to
others. It was an apparent stroke of fate that played an essential part in this
process. By the turn of the century Beethoven had begun to experience bouts of
deafness. It was this inability to hear that inevitably directed his attention
to composition rather than performance, as the latter activity became
increasingly impossible. Deafness was to isolate him from society and to
accentuate still further his personal eccentricities of behaviour, shown in his
suspicious ingratitude to those who helped him and his treatment of his nephew
Karl and his unfortunate sister-in-law.
In Vienna Beethoven lived through
turbulent times. The armies of Napoleon, once admired by Beethoven as an
enlightened republican, until he had himself crowned as emperor, were to occupy
the imperial capital, and war brought various changes of fortune to the
composer's friends and supporters. The last twelve years of his life were spent
in the relative political tranquillity that followed Napoleon's final defeat, a
period in which the freedom of thought that had characterised the reign of
Joseph II was replaced by the repression of his successors, anxious to prevent
a recurrence of the unfortunate events that had caused such damage in France.
Beethoven survived as an all-licensed eccentric, his bellowed political
indiscretions tolerated, while others, apparently saner, were subject to the
attention of the secret police. He died in March, 1827, his death the occasion
for public mourning in Vienna at the passing of a figure whose like the city was
not to see again.
The years after the downfall of Napoleon
in 1815 may have brought a measure of peace to Europe, and to Vienna, where the
Congress met to re-establish something of the old order. 1815 brought new
turbulence in Beethoven's private affairs, with the death from tuberculosis of
his brother Caspar Carl, who left a nine-year-old son, Karl. The following five
years found Beethoven in a bitter legal wrangle with his sister-in-law Johanna
van Beethoven over the guardianship of the boy, a quarrel in which he did not
hesitate to denigrate the boy's mother in every possible way. The influence of
his powerful friends had its result in an Appeal Court verdict in his favour in
1820, although his relationship with his nephew cannot have brought either of
them much satisfaction.
1820 brought a renewed burst of activity
as a composer. In that year Beethoven completed his Sonata in E Major, Opus
109, and the two final piano sonatas were to follow in 1821 and early 1822.
At the same time the Missa Solemnis was finished and work was continued on the Ninth
Symphony. The remarkable final string quartets were to follow.
The thirty-two piano sonatas of Beethoven
span a period of twenty-five years, from the publication in 1796 of the three
sonatas of Opus 2, dedicated to Joseph Haydn, to the last sonatas of
1820, 1821 and 1822. They reflect the development of the composer's language
and invention, as the high classical style gives way to wilder poetic
imaginings and technical expansions of the original form, taking advantage of
the increased range and capacity of the piano itself, which underwent various
changes.
The Sonata in E Major, Opus 109,
was dedicated to Maximiliane Brentano, daughter of Antonie Brentano, a
convincing candidate for the role of Immortal Beloved, the mysterious woman who
was revealed as the object of Bcethoven's hopeless attachment in a letter found
among his effects after his death. The sonata, which follows immediately after
the massive Hammerklavier Sonata, has an improvisatory element in its swift
change of mood from the bright opening to the Adagio that interrupts it. The
rapid second movement in E minor provides a brief glimpse of traditional sonata
form before the final movement, an expressive theme and six variations,
starting with a waltz and including, in the fifth variation, that element of
counterpoint that had become increasingly important.
Beethoven intended to dedicate his last
two sonatas to Antonie Brentano, although Opus 111 appeared in Vienna
with a dedication to Archduke Rudolph. The Sonata in A Flat Major, Opus 110,
opens with a theme, to be played con amabilita, one of those expressive
melodies that Beethoven had handled so well as a performer. Delicate arpeggios
lead to a subsidiary theme, which is to return as the movement draws to a
close. The second movement, a duple time scherzo and trio, leads to a third
movement with all the freedom of improvisation, including a recitative and
Arioso dolente that is to return to link the following fugue with the inversion
of the subject that forms the final section of the movement.
The Sonata in C Minor, Opus 111,
opens with a strongly dramatic introduction leading to the statement of what
sounds very much like a fugal subject, although it is to receive different
treatment of a less formal kind in the movement that follows. The second of the
two movements of the sonata is in the form of a theme and variations in C
major, treated with considerable freedom. The two movements combine in a
remarkable way the two elements that had assumed the greatest importance in the
last period of Beethoven's creative life, the element of counterpoint and the
element of variation, which here undergo their apotheosis.
Jeno Jando
Jeno Jando was born at Pecs, in south
Hungary, in 1952. He started to learn the piano when he was seven and later
studied at the Ferenc Liszt Academy of Music under Katalin Nemes and Pal
Kadosa, becoming assistant to the latter on his graduation in 1974. Jand6 has
won a number of piano competitions in Hungary and abroad, including first prize
in the 1973 Hungarian Piano Concours and a first prize in the chamber music
category at the Sydney International Piano Competition in 1977. In addition to
his many appearances in Hungary, he has played widely abroad in Eastern and Western
Europe, in Canada and in Japan.
He is currently engaged in a project to
record all of Beethoven's piano solo works for Naxos. Other recordings for the
Naxos label include the concertos of Grieg and Schumann as well as
Rachmaninov's 2nd Concerto and Paganini Rhapsody.