Beethoven's Piano Sonatas no.29 and no.30, published in 1819 and 1821 by Artaria and Schlesinger respectively as Opus 106 and Opus 109, are among the fundamental works he wrote for the piano. Moreover, Opus 106 is one of the few sonatas composed specifically 'fur das Hammerklavier' and not 'pour le piano-forte', Artaria having undertaken to publish two versions of it, one in German, the other in French. It is the German term that asserted itself, and the Grose Sonate has ever since been known as the Hammerklavier Sonata. And large this sonata was from every point of view: its scale is gigantic, and its structure is both original and vast. It is one of Beethoven's first works to abandon the traditional harmonia procedure of descending in fourths or fifths in favour of progressions in descending thirds. These progressions, typical of his 'last period', endowed the whole with a new harmonic colour that Schubert was not slow in appropriating. The splendours of this 29th Sonata manifest themselves within the first few bars and go on to unfold themselves in the longest and most sublime Adagio Beethoven ever composed for the piano. The final fugue, of an unprecedented contrapuntal richness, was hardly understood in its time and continues, in the words of the composer, 'to give pianists a hard time . . .'. Written for the most part at Modling in the summer of 1818, the Sonata op.106 was dedicated to Archduke Rudolph. The first movement contains thematic material Beethoven had originally conceived for a 4-part chorus, Vivat Rodolphus, intended for the name-day of the Archduke of Austria.
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