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viernes, 3 de mayo de 2013

Rv: Ariel Piano sent you a message: One of Beethoven's most intimate sonatas


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De: YouTube Service <noreply@youtube.com>
Para: JORGE ALBERTO BARON <jorgealbertobaron@yahoo.es>
Enviado: Jueves 2 de Mayo de 2013 12:30
Asunto: Ariel Piano sent you a message: One of Beethoven's most intimate sonatas

Ariel Piano sent you a message: One of Beethoven's most intimate sonatas
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To:JORGE ALBERTO BARON

In Sonata No. 30, Op. 109, Beethoven seems to be looking ahead to Chopin.
Please like (if you life), comment (if you wish), and subscribe to my main channel at www.youtube.com/arielpiano (if you haven't alre... more
Ariel Lanyi plays Beethoven Sonata No. 30 Op. 109
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The first of Beethoven's last three piano sonatas, the Sonata in E major, Op. 109, in addition to being a piece of remarkable beauty and lyricism, redefines the meaning of the term "classical sonata." Instead of the typical sonata-allegro movement, the piece opens with a slow part of an improvisational character. The second part, a fast scherzo, is again uncommon in a three-part sonata. The center of gravity of the sonata is in the third movement that consists of a theme and five or six variations (depending on who does the counting and how). It starts with a simple chorale, culminates in the last variation with a gigantic double trill in the high register of the piano, and ends quietly with the restatement of the chorale.
Played at a recital at the Felicja Blumental Music Center in Tel-Aviv.
Part 1: 0:12
Part 2: 3:49
Part 3: 6:04
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