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Category:Music Total size: 582.13 MB Added: 8 months ago (2025-03-28 02:46:02)
Share ratio:3 seeders, 0 leechers Info Hash:E5772403F48DF0D547458D9177D0F40DD2EDAB7B Last updated: 7 hours ago (2025-12-16 05:02:44)
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Description:
Artist: Yasuyo Yano
Title: Schubert: Piano Sonatas, Vol. 2
Year Of Release: 2022
Label: IBS Classical
Genre: Classical Piano
Quality: flac lossless (tracks) 24bits - 48.0kHz
Total Time: 01:03:47
Total Size: 584 mb
Tracklist
01. Piano Sonata in C Minor, D. 958: I. Allegro
02. Piano Sonata in C Minor, D. 958: II. Adagio
03. Piano Sonata in C Minor, D. 958: III. Menuetto. Allegro
04. Piano Sonata in C Minor, D. 958: IV. Allegro
05. Piano Sonata in E-Flat Major, Op. 122, D. 568: I. Allegro moderato
06. Piano Sonata in E-Flat Major, Op. 122, D. 568: II. Andante molto
07. Piano Sonata in E-Flat Major, Op. 122, D. 568: III. Menuetto. Allegretto
08. Piano Sonata in E-Flat Major, Op. 122, D. 568: IV. Allegro moderato
In addition to the interpretive values of the great fortepianist Yasuyo Yano, listening the Schubertâs fortepiano sonatas on an original instrument, always has enormous added value. Second volume of Franz Schubertâs "Sonatas for fortepiano" in which Yasuyo Yano chooses two of the greatest sonatas: No. 19 in C Minor and No. 7 in E-flat Major. The Sonata in C minor, D. 958 is characteristic of Schubertâs feeling of retreat. Towards the end, the movement rushes ever more quietly towards silence, before two brute final chords conclude this grandiose sonata. The Sonata in E-flat major, D. 568, begins with a thoughtfully cautious Unsiono. This rapturous mood is soon interrupted by a brisk transition, only to culminate in a swaying waltz-sweetness composed with supple chromaticism. The themes and their lively interplay always reveal a melancholy mood.
It can be speculated whether Franz Schubert, with the furious beginning of the Sonata in C minor, D. 958, composed in 1828, attempted to stand up compositionally against Ludwig van Beethoven, who was regarded as superior, to make a defiant âI can do that tooâ confession, as it were. This view is sometimes reinforced by the fact that Schubert might have felt liberated by Beethovenâs death in 1827 and would finally have been able to step out of his shadow. Certainly, however, this interpretation does not do Schubert justice when one considers that many of Schubertâs very great works were composed before then â e.g. he composed the âTrout Quintetâ D. 667 in 1819, and in 1824 the Octet D. 803 and the string quartets âRosamundeâ D. 804 and âDeath and the Maidenâ D. 810 â where would Beethovenâs âshadowâ be felt in these masterpieces?
One can imagine that Schubert had had a certain, perhaps even great shyness towards Beethoven. Strangely enough, there is no record of a meeting between the two, even though they were both working in the same city at the same time in the same, relatively rare composerâs profession, and both were thus well known and respected.
On closer inspection, Schubertâs compositions hardly appear as a will to distinguish himself from Beethoven, or even as an attempt to outdo him. His enormously extensive catalogue of works suggests that Schubert had spent almost every spare minute of his short life composing. Unlike Beethoven, who had to work out his compositions with countless notes, Schubertâs music almost always flowed effortlessly from hand to paper. By composing what he heard inwardly, Schubert was able to preserve his independence. The fact that he was exposed to a certain influence from the universally respected Beethoven can be regarded as quite normal and actually unavoidable, although it remains open how conscious Schubert was of this influence in his inspirations.
More than the music of others, texts, primarily poems, were an important source of inspiration for Schubert; he was inflamed by literary-poetic models, his soul literally merged with them. Finally, it can be said that Schubert embodied his Biedermeier era in an almost archetypal way, since the escape into the idyll, into the private sphere, was the essential feeling of the time. Beethoven was still rubbing up against the courtly representation of the late 18th century, whereas Schubert was probably too busy migrating into his inner self to care about rivalries