Domenico Scarlatti (1685-1757) – Sonata in C major K159

Our man Domenico was born in Naples, Italy. And yet his life is strongly associated with Spain. This is probably because around 1720 he settled in Lisbon with the job of maestro of the royal chapel. His principal student there was Princess Maria Barbara. When Princess Maria married the heir to the Spanish throne, Scarlatti moved with her to Madrid where he spent his remaining life.

This is important because Scarlatti is primarily known for his over 550 single movement keyboard sonatas, all of which (I’ve read) were written for this single student.

Ralph Kirkpatrick, in his 1953 publication on Scarlatti, concluded that nearly 400 of the sonatas were to be grouped by two; one slow, one fast, each in the same key similar to a Baroque suite. Some others were to be grouped in threes. If this is true, Scarlatti had already conceived of a multi-movement sonata. Consider Beethoven’s Appassionata; the first and last movements are sonata-allegro forms, with the middle movement in variation form.

Some of Scarlatti’s sonatas, like the one programmed here, can by easily viewed in a sonata-allegro form. However, sonata-allegro form was developed by later composers. Though Scarlatti’s sonatas were not designed with this form in mind, his musical knack seems to have placed him ahead of his time.

About the Sonata

The Sonata – 2008 Program

History dates the first use of the term sonata from a treatise by the italian Adriano Banchieri around 1605. However its form and structure has changed considerably over the hundreds of years since then.  Many believe that the sonata allegro form used in the Beethoven first movement derived from a simple binary dance movement formulated in a prior age; Two sections marked to be repeated within one larger movement.  In general, the first section modulates to a related key and the second section modulates back to the original key.

In the early baroque period a suite of dance pieces was sometimes referred to as a sonata; in other instances a suite or group was referred to as a partita.  These suites oftentimes followed the pattern of Allemande, Courante, Sarabande, composer’s choice, and Gigue.  The individual pieces within the suite developed from actual dances of the times.

The pattern of pieces in the earliest suites followed the alternating fast-slow-fast pattern. The Sarabande (a middle movement) in the suite standardized by JS Bach was generally the slow movement. It is an elegant two step dance favored by the European aristocracy of the period.

Each of the Bach partitas begins with an introductory piece, each with a different title.  The suite programmed here begins with Praeludium; others open with Sinfonia, Overture and other titles.  But in each case there follows an allemande, a corrente (or courante) a sarabande, a discretionary piece or two, and then the lively gigue.

Some believe that the multi-movement sonata is a development of the multi-movement dance suite.  The Beethoven sonata programmed here has movements in the order slow-fast-slow.  This order is the reverse of what one generally finds in the classic pattern of sonata movements of earlier times.

Sonata-allegro refers to the form of an individual movement within the overall multi-movement sonata. The sonata-allegro form, like the binary dance forms found in the baroque dance suite, is generally a binary form.  However, the sonata-allegro form expands the form by having a two or more theme first section with a modulation to a related key. This section is called the “exposition” since the composer exposes thematic material.  A middle section called the “development” section takes material from the exposition and plays with it at the composers discretion.  Then a third section entitled the “recapitulation” returns to a restatement of themes from the exposition usually in the original key.  Many later sonatas include an introduction to the exposition (like Praeludium in Bach’s partita in Bb though not separate) and a coda (a closing section after the recapitulation)

So by some accounts, the Bach and Beethoven programmed here, are sonatas born approximately 100 years apart.  The Bach was written about 1730, the Beethoven about 1821.

Cyclical Form

In an effort to make the individual pieces within the overall sonata more cohesive, some composers made their works cyclical.  This technique ties thematic material in one movement to another movement.  Notice that Bach ties individual pieces within the Bb partita by using the key signature of Bb for each of the works individual movements.

In the opening measures of opus 110, Beethoven sets the key signature, the mood, the thematic material of the first theme and food for a number of other musical ideas; including ideas for the last movement.  In fact, on a second listening (and if you allow yourself) you will hear an ornamented version of the simple last movement fugue theme.  It is a code within a code.

2006 Program

2006 Program

Moritz Moskowski & Paganini – Liszt – Sparkles and Bells

Invention of the modern piano has been credited to Bartolemeau Christofori who, around 1700, developed the first pianoforte (meaning soft/loud). The modern piano is distinguished from older keyboard instruments like the clavichord and harpsichord by an escapement action and string dampening.  The clavichord is a string striking instrument like the modern piano and allows for color and sensitivity of touch. It requires absolute silence to hear its quiet sounds, but can be played with great musical sensitivity. The harpsichord is more robust and is a string plucking instrument.

By the second half of the nineteenth century the piano had been around for some 150 years.  It had developed into an instrument which resembled the modern instrument of this day with only minor modifications.  The modern piano allowed for a wide range of sound and color and was considerably more robust than the older instruments.

The old instruments were made of wood, but with the industrial revolution came piano harps made of steel.  This increased string tensions, allowed for more strings per note and contributed to the increased color and sound.  Thus the pianoforte became even more piano and forte.

Many composers of the time were also pianists.  And the love affair with the instrument peaked in the late 19th century.  Like the 20th century love affair with the automobile, there was a race to explore the capabilities of this strengthened instrument. Mozart and later Beethoven were just a few of the earlier players who enjoyed the continually improving instrument.

In a time before radio, television, and computer games, during a time when entertainment had flooded out of the courts of the aristocracy and into the halls of the masses, the general population of many European towns flocked to concert halls to hear their favorite artists.

In this environment, a fascination with virtuosity in the late part of the nineteenth century caused many composer-pianists to write music which displayed the extreme possibilities of the instrument.  Like the heightened result of auto racing to the automobile, these races brought the heightened technical skills necessary to produce even more varied and exciting music to the developing instrument.

And for some reason, this music on the edge, a music which explores speed, agility, tone color, sound and brightness, this particular music, arising from a time when a wondrous instrument called the piano shone at the pinnacle of its day, has a way of producing a smile and shear delight in a willing listener.

Form in Music

There are many forms in music and all music has structure.  Even the absence of order has its method.  If you look at a theoretically free “through composed” piece, one which never references a past melody, motif, key, time signature, rhythm, tone, etc. then it is composed in perfect control.  Like a single note, the order of chaos has no internal reference; it is exactly what it is.

Form is structure.  You will find at least two sonatas, two sets of variations, a few binary forms, perhaps a couple of ABA forms.  Though a waltz is not a form, you will find at least two waltzes.  I say at least because one might view Schubert’s third variation programmed here as a waltz.  If you consider it a waltz, also admit that it is a waltz in search of identity.  The left hand waltzes.  The right hand dominates in duple time but finds time to waltz from time to time.

Sonata Form

The basic single movement sonata-allegro form is an expanded ABA form.  The letters refer to sections of a piece with common musical material. The exposition (first A) has two or more themes in two related keys.  The development section (B) improvises on some of this musical material and then returns to a modification of the A section where at least two of the original themes are stated in the original (tonic) key.

Beethoven, the master of form, uses this structure in both the first and last movements of his “Appassionata”.  The middle movement is a theme and four variations.  The theme and its variations are in binary form, that is two sections, each with repeats.

Though Scarlatti wrote over five hundred sonatas, nearly all are in binary form.  This form simply requires that there be two sections of approximately equal duration or weight.

The binary forms found in the Schubert variations programmed here, in the K159 Scarlatti sonata, and those found in the middle movement of the Appassionata, modulate to a second theme in a different key.  Beethoven, true to form, modulates to the dominant, the most common related key.  However, composers sometimes modulate to a non-related key through a chord with common notes.  This “unusual” key modulation was a signature aspect of the romantic period.  Though Schubert was not born into the “romantic period”, this attribute reflects his musical inclination.

It is important to note the increase in duration between the Scarlatti and Beethoven sonatas.  Including all movements, the Beethoven is ten times longer!  The first movement is five times longer.  And yet the required elements are equal.  Expanded form was a signature of Beethoven and the romantics.

2011 Program

  • Sonata Opus 27, No. 2 “Moonlight” — Beethoven
    • Adagio sostenuto
    • Allegretto
    • Presto agitato
  • Two Pieces
    • Franz Schubert — Impromptu Opus 90, No 1
    • Serge Prokofiev — Tocatta
  • Frederick Chopin — Nocturne Opus 9, No 3
  • Frederick Chopin — Fantasy Opus 49
  • Paganini — Liszt From “Six Grande Etudes”
    • La Campanella
    • La Chase
    • Theme and Variations
  • Frederick Chopin — Nocturne Opus 15, No. 1

Program Notes

You will hear fanciful music.  These compositions are products of the heart of humanism, of the individual.  The underlying form or structure is oftentimes hidden though in theory correct as in Beethoven’s “Moonlight Sonata”.  But in other cases, the form is modified to meet personal expression.

The “Moonlight” sonata is marked “quasi fantasy” and the main sonata-allegro movement is the last not the first.  Form in Beethoven’s first movement, like the Schubert programmed here, is barely noticed.  “Quasi fantasy” is an appropriate description, but in other works “quasi sonata” might be more descriptive.

The terms fantasy, impromptu, toccata suggest the freedom of the human spirit in the age of the individual. The “moonlight” of Beethoven became more mood and impression in the night pieces of Frederick Chopin.  His generally peaceful “Nocturnes” seem to touch delicate and more contemplative moments of human experience.

Prokofiev, on the other hand, expresses a harsher spirit over the underlying form in his Toccata.  He uses drive and percussiveness to weave an impression of a mechanized world.  There was no hint of Prokofiev’s mechanization during Beethoven’s time, though “Moonlight’s” last movement has a similar drive.  However, unlike the other composers programmed here, Prokofiev’s world was rooted in the age of the machine.

Where the quiet fancy of the night, or the fancy of passion, might seem to be the focus of some of this music, the Paganini etudes of Liszt offer a new direction to fanciful.  These etudes find delight in the development of physical ability and in exploration of the piano itself.  These “Concert Etudes” explore both sound and instrument.

***

You will find elements of three classical forms in the pieces you hear today.  And these forms are secondary to musical expression and not always easily discovered.

Beethoven’s first and last movements, Schubert’s impromptu, Prokofiev’s toccata, Chopin’s fantasy are all precisely or in general sonata-allegro forms.

Beethoven’s middle movement, both Chopin Nocturnes and La Chasse are each generally ABA; though ABA is at the root of sonata-allegro form.

Another form found here is theme and variations.  La Campanella and the last Paganini etude are examples.

In general, this music uses strict underlying classical forms with modifications demanded by composers who lived in an age of the individual.

Ludwig Van Beethoven (1770-1827)

The “moonlight sonata” might well be the composer’s most popular work, though it is only the first movement that garners that fame.  One generally thinks of the first movement as a romantic night piece, although it may well hold another darker mood. The last movement is a generally quiet perpetual motion work with moments of impassioned outburst; and the middle movement is a minuet and trio.

Franz Schubert    (1797-1828)

Though known best as a composer of lieder, Schubert wrote for the piano a significant volume of lengthy multi-movement sonatas, short character pieces, and single works of tone poem proportion.  He weaves his unique magic around the significant resonance of the piano, around the beauty of baroque harmony in a romantic setting, and the majesty of accompanied song, duet, and an occasional solitary sole.

The opening single line statement in g seems to revolve around the key of c minor.  And the key signature would indicate a work in c minor.  However, after eight statements of similar tunes around this tonal center, the composer modulates down a third to Ab major and dwells in and around there until the transition back to c minor and a development section.  After Schubert’s singular sort of development, he recapitulates much of the opening material surrounding c minor.  Then, in a moment of uplift, he alters the key signature and moves through G on his way to a destination in C major. The drama of this change permeates the remainder of the work.

Frederick Chopin   (1810 – 1849)

Chopin dedicated most of his musical creativity to compositions for the piano, and the creation of the 21 Nocturnes spanned most of his creative life.  These two nocturnes were written around the time of Chopin’s move to Paris in 1831.  The F major nocturne is straight forward in simple ABA form.  It is similar to the Bb major nocturne in its stormy driven B section.

The Bb nocturne, on the other hand, is significantly more complex.  In the first A section, you will find two distinct themes and a chorus.  Each of the two distinct themes repeats twice with the chorus following each statement.  Note that each statement is altered with varied embellishments, some of which are quite lengthy.  The B section is driven, with continually active left hand triplets marked Agitato.  This nocturne has elements of minuet and trio, and of rondo form.  There are no less than five statements of its chorus.

The Opus 49 fantasy begins its life in f minor and ends its journey in Ab, the relative major.  If there is a “chorus”, it is a march, though the march sometimes harbors anticipation, is sometimes subdued, and it even changes mood and becomes a chorale.  In its last iteration, it becomes a declaratory statement.  If you think of the fantasy in sonata-allegro terms the first theme is a sweeping lyric statement in thirds and sixths, and the second is a march.  The opening march is an introduction. It is a fanciful work and modulates by fourths and fifths, but also by thirds and through chromaticism.

Sergei Prokofiev (1891-1953)

Prokofiev was a child of the industrial age and his overlay of imagery on the underlying sonata-allegro base seems born of the age in which he lived.  At the start one might imagine a great whirling machine awaiting its load.  But later, when load is applied, the hungry yet massive gears grind slower.  At other times they spin joyously in unimpeded anticipation.  There is the roaring and clanking of metal on metal when the moment arises and then the roaring up into the renewed pleasure of its task.

Paganini-Liszt      (Niccolo Paganini 1782–1840, Franz Liszt 1811-1886)

Franz Liszt wrote many etudes and transcriptions during his relatively long life.  Of the six “Paganini” etudes, La Campanella is the only one not drawn from Paganini’s 24 violin caprices.  The tune is found in the great violinist’s violin concerto; and it’s “bells” ring from beginning to end.

Whereas other composers of etudes generally have a particular technical focus, Liszt’s etudes offer many different challenges.  The “Paganini” etudes are considered concert etudes in that their purpose lies beyond simple exercise. Note the lightness, leaps, and brilliant sounds in each selection. Witness fast light finger work, octaves, and all around playfulness for both performer and listener; with catchy tunes!

La Chasse recalls the horns of the hunt with its open thirds and sixths.  The last etude, known as the “Variations” etude, uses a popular theme of its day.  Numerous composers including Brahms, Schumann, Rachmaninoff and Szymanowski wrote significant works on this theme.

2010 Program

Sonata in C major k159                                              Domenico Scarlatti (1685-1757)

Sonata No. 23 in F minor, Op. 57 “Appassionata”       Ludwig Van Beethoven (1770-1827)
Allegro assai
Andante con moto
Allegro ma non troppo

Impromptu in Bb major, Opus 142, No. 3                   Franz Schubert (1797-1828)

Waltz in Db major, Opus 70, No. 1 Frederick              Chopin (1810-1849)
Nocturne in F minor, Opus 55, No. 1
Nocturne in Eb major, Opus 55, No. 2

Mephisto Waltz                                                          Franz Liszt (1811-1886)

2006 Program / Recital Schedule

Dates / Locations

David Wasser, Pianist

  • 5 November 2006
    Howard Community College
    Columbia Maryland – 7:30 PM
  • Wednesday 25 October 2006
    Vantage House, Columbia, Maryland
2006 Program

The following past teachers have had significant influence on the artist:
Thelma Callahan, Stewart Gordon, Adele Marcus, Jacob Lateiner, Ron Elliston, Cleveland Page, Nina Lelchuk.

Special thanks are due my current teacher, Dr Kristina Suter and to her colleagues at the HCC music school who have provided the nurturing environment needed for musical growth.

2005 Program / Recital Schedule

Dates / Locations

  • Tuesday 27 September, 2005
    Vantage House, Columbia Maryland – 7:30 PM
  • Sunday 16 October, 2005
    Smith Theatre, Howard Community College – 4:00 PM

Program

The following past teachers have had significant influence on the artist:
Thelma Callahan, Stewart Gordon, Adele Marcus, Jacob Lateiner, Ron Elliston, Cleveland Page, Nina Lelchuk.

Special thanks are due my current teacher, Dr Kristina Suter and to her colleagues at the HCC music school who have provided the nurturing environment needed for musical growth.

2007-2008 Program

Concerts for 07-08

  • UPDATED! Vantage House (for residents) – Columbia, Maryland –
  • Howard County Community College – Monteabaro Recital Hall (open to public) –
  • Pin Oak Village (for residents) – Bowie, Maryland –
  • Others to be announced

David Wasser, PianistProgram