Franz SCHUBERT (1797-1828)
Piano Sonatas (Fragments)
Tragedy and failure is suggested by the idea of 'fragment'
in music and particularly in the case of Schubert. In addition to popular
works, such as the Symphony in B minor, D.759, Unfinished, the uncompleted
stage oratorio Lazarus, D.689, or the String Quartet in C minor, D.703, there
are a large number of fragmentary piano sonatas. Most of these, of which four
are here included, come from the period between 1817 and 1823, Schubert's
so-called years of crisis. Much of what Schubert tackled at this time may be
reckoned among his most daring and strange works and remained fragmentary,
serving, as it were, as experiments in composition. Schubert wanted to prepare
the way, through the intermediate stages of string quartet and piano sonatas,
for the grand symphony. These sonata fragments, therefore, take on a particular
value in Schubert's creative life, not least because of their relatively high
number, with twelve unfinished sonatas against eleven completed now surviving.
They document the composer's struggle over the formal pattern of an already
strongly traditional form, the sonata. Often models, Haydn, Mozart, Hummel,
Carl Maria von Weber and above all Beethoven, are clearly perceptible in these
works, yet at the same time Schubert's personal style is already strongly
marked. The use of keys with a higher number of sharps or flats (D flat major,
D.567; B major, D.575; A flat major, D.557), which indicate a strongly
emotional expressive content, is an essential characteristic of the sonatas
from this period. Generally two types of fragment may be distinguished,
fragments of sonata expositions on the one hand, which break off in the
development or, at the latest, with the start of the recapitulation, and on the
other hand cycle fragments where independent movements were not completed. The
piano sonata fragments allow a profound examination of Schubert's inner
compositional procedures, yet do not answer the ever present question as to why
Schubert broke off at this or that point in the work and did not take it up again.
Is it the feeling that the thematic material is pushed to its limits or that
the demands of the form could not be correctly met, or is it simply the inner
pressure to change to a new, supposedly more exciting or more rewarding task? A
definitive answer is not always possible through thorough analysis. In the end,
therefore, the music itself must speak, music that in these cases always brings
with it a touch of the puzzle and mystery.
Leading pianists and Schubert scholars have attempted to
complete the surviving fragments. For the present recording, however, it was
decided to remain true exclusively to Schubert's original text and to work
without the completions of others, thus to underline also the fragmentary
impression of these pieces. In two places, however, movements are completed
through analogy with parallel passages. In the Sonata in D flat major, D.567,
for the last missing page of the finale it was possible to draw from the later
E flat major version of this work; in the Sonata in F minor, D.625/505, the
missing harmonisation in the finale (bars 201 to 270) was completed by analogy
with the similar passage at the beginning of the movement.
With the Sonata in A flat major, D.557, composed in May
1817, we find a probable cycle fragment by Schubert. In spite of the
completeness of all three surviving movements, this work presents a puzzle in
regard to the grouping of keys. The first movement in A flat major and the
second in the dominant key of E flat major follow the conventional sonata structure,
but the third movement is again in E flat major. Since this movement has the
evident character of a finale, the question arises as to whether Schubert
intended to finish the work in E flat and not in A flat, or whether a fourth
movement is missing or has been lost. This question has not been definitely
answered by modern research so that the sonata is still reckoned among sonata
fragments. The simple piano writing of this sonata often recalls Haydn and
Mozart and the E flat minor central section of the second movement suggests the
example of Johann Sebastian Bach in its rhythmic strictness. The opening theme
of the third movement presents an interesting parallel to the last movement of
the Sonata in A major, D.664, written two years later. In this short work
Schubert shows altogether his cheerful, happy, yet very classically influenced
side.
With the Sonata in D flat major, D.567, written in June
1817, Schubert engaged with particular intensity. It similarly survives as a
cycle fragment, lacking the last page of the third movement of the autograph
manuscript. Schubert's friend Anselm Hüttenbrenner writes in his memoirs of
this sonata: it 'was written with such difficulty that he [Schubert] could not
play it without encouragement. ... He ... sent it to a foreign publisher; but he
had it back with the indication that they would not risk publishing such a
terribly difficult composition ...'. This objection induced Schubert a year later
to transpose the work into the easier key of E flat major and extend it by the
addition of a third movement Minuet and Trio. In this four-movement form it was
published in Vienna in 1829 as Op.122 (D.568). The original version in D flat
major is counted among the most ambitious and tricky of Schubert's sonatas. The
C sharp minor middle movement points in its strictness to the expressive world
of Beethoven, while in the outer movements extended lyrical themes of romantic
almost Biedermeier serenity predominate.
Beethoven's mighty shadow is evident most clearly of all in
the Sonata in C major, D.613/612, and the Sonata in F minor, D.625/505, of
1818. The association with this great model occurs in these works with the
short quotation in the former in bars 13 to 19 of the first movement of the
Waldstein Sonata and in the latter in the texture and technique suggesting the
first movement of the Appassionata, with the strict adoption of the key scheme.
As in the Appassionata Schubert follows the key progression F minor to D flat
major (the slow movement) and F minor and adds (eventually, in place of the
Adagio) a Scherzo in E major.
The Sonata in C major, D.613, is a cycle fragment. The work
consists of two unfinished movements, of which the second, without tempo
indication, is of particular interest. It must here be a planned final
movement, which suggests, with its lilting 6/8 metre an Allegretto tempo. The
clearly virtuoso and pianistically effectively conceived piano writing here
feels very strongly influenced by Carl Maria von Weber. On the basis of
research into the paper and the manuscript it seems that this fragment comes from
the same time as the Adagio in E major, D.612, considered as a slow movement,
which is harmonically and thematically directly related with the principal
movement.
Franz Schubert worked on his Sonata in F minor, D.625/505,
in September 1818 in Zseliz (Hungary), where he spent the summer months of 1818
and 1824 as music teacher to the daughters of Count Esterhazy. In particular
the first movement of this sonata shows, with the influence of Beethoven,
Schubert's attempts to find a new path. In the exposition he no longer
contrasts two themes, but derives one from the other, thus the greatest part of
the exposition turns into a kind of development with breathtaking modulations
and the unrelentingly recurrent trill motif (almost an anticipation of the
demonic use of the trill in Schubert's last Sonata in B flat major, D.960). The
movement breaks off at the beginning of the recapitulation. The Scherzo in E
major, and the Adagio in D flat major published earlier in a separate form as
D.505 and in the light of modern research regarded as belonging to the Sonata
in F minor, are both complete. The dramatic and, for Schubert, unusually
virtuoso final movement brings two strongly contrasted themes together. This
goes astonishingly far beyond the style of its time and places this movement in
affinity with a work of Chopin or Liszt.
Gottlieb Wallisch
English version by Keith Anderson