The Piano Sonata in E-flat minor, Op. 26 was written by Samuel Barber in 1949 for the twenty-fifth anniversary of the League of Composers. Commissioned by Irving Berlin and Richard Rodgers, it was first performed by Vladimir Horowitz and has remained a popular concert staple since.[1]

History edit

In 1950, the League of Composers, a society aimed at promoting new American works, met for the twenty-fifth anniversary of its inception. Samuel Barber set to work writing a piano sonata for the occasion, and requested Vladimir Horowitz to perform it. His demands were met, and the work was received with overwhelming critical acclaim.[1] Funding for the League of Composers commission was donated by Irving Berlin and Richard Rodgers.[2] Horowitz premiered the Sonata in Havana, Cuba, on December 9, 1949, followed by performances in Cleveland and Washington, DC,[3] before presenting the work at Carnegie Hall on January 23, 1950.[4]

Structure edit

The sonata is in four movements, and usually takes twenty minutes to perform:[5]

  1. Allegro energico
  2. Allegro vivace e leggero
  3. Adagio mesto
  4. Fuga: Allegro con spirito

Though extremely difficult to execute, the sonata is much more than a virtuosic showpiece. Barber integrated many 20th century musical ideas into the sonata, including extended chromaticism and tone rows.[1]

The first movement begins with a raucous theme, presented in both clefs. Barber's unique use of tone row patterns is immediately prevalent,[clarification needed] and it is through these patterns that the contrapuntal and thematic material is developed.[citation needed] The movement ends like it begins, rather abruptly.

The second movement, much lighter in tone than the first, serves somewhat as a scherzo and is far more tonally centered than the first.[citation needed] The opening motif is repeated throughout the entire movement in a variety of patterns and keys, often shifting semi-tonally. Almost as effortlessly as it starts, the second movement drifts off into the third with a high arpeggio.

Like the first movement, the thematic material in the third is presented through tone rows and chromatic figures. The third movement builds up tension through its use of highly dissonant chord progressions, and is much darker than the second.[citation needed]

The fourth movement is a classic fugue of ferocious virtuosity that makes strenuous technical demands of the performer. The main theme of the fugue, a three-bar chromatic syncopated melody, is developed over multiple variations and modulations, moving between hands and, midway through the piece, yielding to a brief E-major interlude with allusions to American Western folk music and Barber's earlier piano composition Excursions. The fugue's lengthy climax restates the main theme in a dazzling cadenza leading to a jazz-tinged block chord quotation and then a restatement in octaves over a striking ostinato motif in the left hand.

Notable recordings edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Hans Tischler, "Barber's Piano Sonata Op. 26", Music & Letters 33, no. 4 (October 1952): 352–54. http://ml.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/pdf_extract/XXXIII/4/352
  2. ^ "The World of Music: Commissions." New York Times, 11 December 1949, X7.
  3. ^ Plaskin, Glenn, "Horowitz, a biography", ISBN 0-688-02656-7, p229
  4. ^ Olin Downes, "Horowitz Offers Barber's Sonata", The New York Times, 24 January 1950, 27.
  5. ^ Eric Brisson, "Barber – Sonata for Piano, Op. 26". http://www.pianopedia.com/w_1097_barber.aspx (4 March 2010)
  6. ^ recorded May 15, 1950; issued on RCA Victor Red Seal LM-1113
  7. ^ recorded August, 1967 in RCA Studio A, New York City; issued in October 1971 on RCA Red Seal LSC-3229
  8. ^ Ives & Barber: Piano Sonatas
  9. ^ Joel Fan — West of The Sun: Music of the Americas"
  10. ^ ClassicsToday.com Joel Fan Recording Review"
  11. ^ Gramophone Magazine Joel Fan Recording Review
  12. ^ Samuel Barber-Adagio (100th Anniversary)