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This suggests that the first public performance was by Liszt in 1836, on what evidence I know not.
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
... Berlioz' account of Liszt's performance seems to be the source. Can't immediately find further evidence in Maynard Solomon, and my Cambridge Companion to Beethoven seems to be spending Christmas away from its shelf
I bet Roehre will have access to chapter and verse.
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
... Berlioz' account of Liszt's performance seems to be the source. Can't immediately find further evidence in Maynard Solomon, and my Cambridge Companion to Beethoven seems to be spending Christmas away from its shelf
I bet Roehre will have access to chapter and verse.
so, Ferney, what you do is highlight the word you are typing that you want to do the magic red thing, click the little globe linky icon at the top of your current post, and it brings up a box, into which you paste the web address from the item you want to link to.
I think !!
good luck.
I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
... Berlioz' account of Liszt's performance seems to be the source. Can't immediately find further evidence in Maynard Solomon, and my Cambridge Companion to Beethoven seems to be spending Christmas away from its shelf
I bet Roehre will have access to chapter and verse.
We don't know.
A performance was planned for Christmas day or 2nd Christmas Day (= Boxing Day), according to an entry in the Conversation booklet which is reliably dated December 10th 1819, but that concert eventually wasn't held.
It is certain that Czerny played the sonata at the beginning of February 1824 (See Konversationshefte 5 p.133), at a semi-public concert.
As Czerny took the Hammerklavier on his repertoire it is likely that the first public performances took place around that time. Further evidence in terms of critics mentioning the work lacks: thus, we don't know.
See also Kinsky-Halm Beethoven Werk-Verzeichnis, 2nd edition 2014, vol.1 p.664.
[It's NOT in the KH 1955 1st edition, btw]
Note that Czerny was one of Liszt's tutors.
Not unimportant is another possibillity: Liszt hints at a performance as he was ten years old or so (thus 1821/'22) in a letter, see Briefe an die Fürstin Carolyne zu Sayn-Wittgenstein, vol.4, p.164 [as quoted in: Riethmüller et al, Beethoven. Interpretation seiner Werke. Vol.2 p.136]
so, Ferney, what you do is highlight the word you are typing that you want to do the magic red thing, click the little globe linky icon at the top of your current post, and it brings up a box, into which you paste the web address from the item you want to link to.
I love this Sonata,but I've never really got to grips with the slow movement.
I always feel as if it's trying to tell me something very important,but it never quite does so.
What's going on there ?
I love this Sonata,but I've never really got to grips with the slow movement.
I always feel as if it's trying to tell me something very important,but it never quite does so.
What's going on there ?
Thank you all for your input. This forum is the best clearing house for exchanging views and information and where one could be pretty much be guaranteed a highly informed response to a wide variety of challenging questions.
Yeah, I wanna learn how to do the long multiquote, quoting from different posts.
At the bottom right of each posting there is a little speech bubble containing a quotation mark, and a plus sign. Click on this for each posting that you want to highlight, then "reply with quote"
Thank you all for your input. This forum is the best clearing house for exchanging views and information and where one could be pretty much be guaranteed a highly informed response to a wide variety of challenging questions.
At the bottom right of each posting there is a little speech bubble containing a quotation mark, and a plus sign. Click on this for each posting that you want to highlight, then "reply with quote"
Whoop-di-doo! Christmas has come early!
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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