Piano Sonata in B minor (Strauss)
The Piano Sonata in B minor, Op.5, was written by Richard Strauss in 1881–82 when he was 17 years old. The Sonata is in the Romantic style of his teenage years. The first recording of the piece was the last recording made by the Canadian pianist Glenn Gould.
Composition
The Piano Sonata is in four movements:- Allegro molto Appassionato
- Adagio Cantabile
- Scherzo Presto – Trio un poco piu Lento
- Finale, Allegro vivo.
The first movement appropriates its familiar four-note head motive from Beethoven's Fifth Symphony. The first movement is fairly saturated with the motive, which appears in the first theme, the bridge and the closing section of the exposition. In addition, much of the development is devoted to a treatment of the motive, and in the closing bars of the movement we find a major key version of the close of Beethoven's first movement"..In the three subsequent movements, "the reliance on Mendelssohn comes more and more to the fore". In particular, Todd argues that Strauss' Adagio Cantabile is effectively a Mendelssohnian Lied ohne Worte . In the Scherzo and Finale, one can also find echoes of Mendelssohn, both in terms of structure, time signature and thematic material. The performance time is approximately 27 minutes.
Strauss had been writing pieces for the piano since he was seven years old, but the Piano Sonata was the most significant one of three to which he gave an opus number. After 1884 his piano writing was either for piano and orchestra and Parergon zur Symphonia Domestica ) or as an accompaniment to the voice in Lieder or other instruments.
Recordings
The best known recording of the piano Sonata was also its first recording, being the very last recording by Glenn Gould. The recordings of the piece include:CD title | Pianist | Reference |
Glenn Gould plays Richard Strauss | Glenn Gould | Sony Glenn Gould Anniversary Edition – 88725413702 |
Richard Strauss – Piano Music | Stefan Veselka | Naxos – 8557713 |
Emili Blasco plays Berg, Soler & Strauss | Emili Blasco | Ars Harmonica – AH100 |
Richard Strauss: Piano Music | Oleg Marshev | Danacord – DACOCD440 |
Tigran Alikhanov in Recital | Tigran Alikhanov | Moscow State Conservatory – SMCCD0096 |
R. Strauss: Complete Chamber Music | Gitti Pirner | Brilliant Classics – 9231 |