Piano Sonata No. 4 (Weinberg)
The Piano Sonata No. 4 in B minor, Op. 56, is a piano sonata in four movements written in 1955 by Polish composer Mieczysław Weinberg. The piece was dedicated to Soviet pianist Emil Gilels.[1]
Compositional background
[edit]In January 1953, Weinberg had been arrested by Soviet authorities on charges of "Jewish bourgeois nationalism" as part of the Doctors' plot and sentenced to execution. However, the death of Stalin shortly after caused his release and marked the start of an era of renewed creative freedom for the composer, who remained in Moscow.
Style
[edit]Weinberg's later piano sonatas, starting with the fourth, mark a departure from the composer's influences in the genre (notably that of Prokofiev and Shostakovich) and a further affirmation of the composer's personal musical style; the fourth sonata is his first truly idiosyncratic sonata.[2][1] However, influences of the older Soviet composers persist; Weinberg himself notes that "the Shostakovich school has been fundamental for my artistic work."[3]
According to Naxos, the sonata "fuses folk inspiration, rhythmic vivacity and melancholy in a profoundly personal way."[4] Weinberg biographer David Fanning describes the work as "classically balanced" and holding a deeper "expressive range" than previous works, the technical demands on the pianist rising in a parallel manner.[3]
The piece is notable for its motivic unity, with a common Largo theme in E minor thematically linking all four movements together.
Structure
[edit]The piece is structured in four movements:
- I. Allegro, in B minor
- II. Allegro, in A minor
- III. Adagio, in Bb major
- IV. Allegro, in B minor
To an opening disquiet, busy Allegro in sonata form succeeds a dance-like, dissonant movement in 3/4 time. The following contemplative and deeply nostalgic Adagio provides a moment of rest before the final Allegro, featuring another dance-like main theme progressively gaining in intensity and despair. However, the agitation of the movement trails off towards the end of the movement, giving way to a Largo theme previously heard in other movements of the sonata. The piece ends in somber silence, over a Bm pianissimo chord.
Average performance duration is about 26 minutes.[5]
Recordings
[edit]Performer | Date of recording | Name of album | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Emil Gilels | 1992 | Vainberg, Stravinsky, Scriabin, Prokofiev, Medtner | |
Murray McLachlan | 1998 | Vainberg: Vol.13 (Piano Sonatas) | |
Allison Brewster Franzetti | 2012 | Weinberg: Complete Piano Works - 2 | part of a Grand Piano Records anthology of the complete works for solo piano by Weinberg[6] |
Anastasia Seifetdinova | 2018 | Music of Alexander Krein and Mieczysław Weinberg | |
Elizaveta Blumina | 2018 | Mieczyslaw Weinberg: Piano Sonatas, Opp. 8, 49bis & 56 | |
Anastasia Yasko | 2021 | 20th Century Russian Piano Sonatas | |
Yulianna Avdeeva | 2023 | Resilience | part of a studio album for Pentatone including works by Szpilman, Shostakovich, Weinberg and Prokofiev[7] |
References
[edit]- ^ a b Seifetdinova, Anastasia (2014). Mieczyslaw Weinberg's Sonata No. 4 for Piano: An Analytical Study (Thesis). OCLC 883628403.[page needed]
- ^ "The Music of Mieczysław Weinberg: Essay, Thematic List of Works, and Information on Scores". music-weinberg.net. 25 April 2023.
- ^ a b Fanning, David (2010). Mieczyslaw Weinberg: In Search of Freedom. Hofheim: Wolke Verlag.
- ^ "WEINBERG, M.: Piano Works (Complete), Vol. 2 (Brew.. - GP607 | Discover more releases from Grand Piano". www.naxos.com. Retrieved 2023-10-13.
- ^ "Piano Sonata No. 4 in B minor, Op. | Details". AllMusic. Retrieved 2023-10-13.
- ^ "Grand Piano Records- WEINBERG, MIECZYSŁAW". grandpianorecords.com. Retrieved 2023-10-13.
- ^ "Resilience". Pentatone. Retrieved 2023-10-13.