Sonata Op. 2, No. 1 in F Minor (1795) : Mvt. 1 Allegro
Sonata Op. 2, No. 1 in F Minor (1795) : Mvt. 1 Allegro
Sonata Op. 2, No. 1 in F Minor (1795) : Mvt. 1 Allegro
1 in F Minor (1795)
The first piano sonata by Beethoven has the subtitle: Joseph Haydn gewidmet,
Sonata pour le clavecin ou pianoforte (dedicated to Joseph Haydn, sonata for harpsichord or
pianoforte). This underlines both the by now established form of the multi-movement piano
sonata (another form created by Papa Haydn, as composers used to call him in reverence) and
the recent technological development of the pianoforte keyboard instrument.
Mvt. 1 Allegro
Form: sonata form. This is a straightforward sonata form in minor, with secondary theme
(M2.1 to M2.3) in the relative major key. The development section is relatively brief, and
modulating to neighbouring keys. The codetta appears at the closing of the exposition and
the recapitulation.
Mvt. 2 Adagio
Form: ABAB. The main theme has a ternary phrase subdivision (M1.1 to M1.1’), with the
first phrase again subdivided into an antecedent-consequent pair (M1.a-M1.b).
Mvt. 4 Prestissimo
Form: sonata. The main theme consists of two phrases (M1.1 and M1.2), the secondary theme
in the dominant minor has a ternary structure (M2.1 to M1.3). The development starts with
a new theme, only later to return to the original main theme. The key centre stays close
to the original minor tonic; only the relative major and (briefly) the lowered sub-mediant
are used (hardly a modulation). Both parts (exposition and development-recapitulation) are
repeated.
Mvt. 1 Grave - Allegro di molto e con brio: sonata form (Cm,, 310 m.)
Int Exposition (126 m.) Development (58 m.) Recapitulation (100 m.) Coda
Mvt. 2 Adagio cantabile: ABA’ Coda form (A, 73 m.) A B A’ C
Mvt. 3 Rondo Allegro: rondo form, ABACABA Coda (Cm,, 210 m.)
A B A C A’ B’ A” Coda