Originally posted by Auferstehen2
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To me the movement, at least in its theme, is extremely humorous - one thinks of tin soldiers marching on, which even the accents would suit. At the same time the theme's second half, which Beethoven asks to be repeated, offers a surprise, for four bars the character suddenly changes to something expressively intimate, before we have to go marching on again. In so doing, the performer has to play the short notes exactly as written. I mention this because I have the impression that nowadays many players are worried by short note-values and prefer to pedal through them. The contrapuntal layout of the first variation for violin and viola. The second is rather more pointillistic: fragmentary elements out of which the picture has to be gradually assembled; in the third and last, played "sempre ligato", the theme evaporates, and in doing so take on the aspect of a sort of anticipatory 'homage to Schumann'. At the end, the coda reprises the theme as a 'marche ouliée' in pianissimo chords until the witty box on the ears of the final fortissimo crochet.
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