
Sticky Notes: The Classical Music Podcast Beethoven Piano Sonata in B Flat Major, Op. 106, "Hammerklavier" - Part 2
Jul 24, 2025
Explore the emotional depth of Beethoven's slow movements, likened to the vast narratives of Tolstoy. Delve into the despair of the Hammerklavier slow movement, described as a mausoleum of collective suffering. Listen as themes evolve from anguish to brief moments of illusive hope. Transition into the final movement, rich with fugal complexity and dramatic contrasts, where playful diversions meet majestic sounds. This journey captures the profound challenges and exhilaration embedded within this monumental sonata.
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Operatic Aria In Piano Guise
- Beethoven's middle section becomes an operatic aria with florid, coloratura-like writing.
- This aria-like music expands the movement's scale and emotional range dramatically.
Unexpected Key, Deep Hope
- Beethoven breaks sonata conventions by placing the second theme in D major, a third away, not in the expected relative major.
- He places it low in the piano so any hope feels deep and inward rather than bright and external.
Recapitulation As Reinvention
- Beethoven shortens the development but drastically extends the recapitulation, echoing aria form.
- The recapitulation intensifies the main theme with florid reinvention and emotional depth.
