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Piano Sonata No. 2
1901245
1901245

Piano Sonata No. 2 Sonata Notturna by Lowell Liebermann Chamber Music - Sheet Music

By Lowell Liebermann
Piano Sonata No. 2 Chamber Music scores gallery preview page 1
Piano Sonata No. 2 Chamber Music scores gallery preview page 2
Piano Sonata No. 2 by Lowell Liebermann Chamber Music - Sheet Music
Piano Sonata No. 2 by Lowell Liebermann Chamber Music - Sheet Music page 2
Chamber Music Piano

SKU: PR.410412930

Sonata Notturna. Composed by Lowell Liebermann. Sws. Solo part. With Standard notation. Opus 10. 16 pages. Duration 14 minutes. Theodore Presser Company #410-41293. Published by Theodore Presser Company (PR.410412930).

ISBN 9781491109038. UPC: 680160087013. 9 x 12 inches.

The Piano Sonata No. 2 (Sonata Notturna) was begun near the end of 1982 and completed in February of 1983. Part of the work was composed during a residency at the Yaddo Artists' Colony in Saratoga Springs, New York. In contrast to my First Piano Sonata, written six years earlier, the Second Piano Sonata is decidedly unvirtuosic in nature; however, its interpretive and musical difficulties are considerable. It is in many ways a companion piece to my First Symphony, which was completed directly prior to the sonata. Both works are concerned with the conflict between the tonal centers of B and C, and obsessive half-step figures which arise from this relationship. In the Second Sonata, all of the ensuing material in fact unfolds from the half-step motive with which the work opens. The Sonata Notturna is in one movement in what could be seen as a modified sonata form - having, however, two expositions, the second one an ornamented, elaborated version of the first, a sort of developmental exposition. As a result of this, the actual development and recapitulation are rather short. The second theme of the work is a two-voice fugue derived from the first theme. In the second exposition an interesting aural illusion occurs: what sounds like an inversion of the fugue is merely a repetition with octave displacement; the subject and countersubject being constructed so that the proper displacement of one becomes the inversion of the other. The work's relentless austerity and sustained mood make any further explication of the subtitle unnecessary. It was written for and is dedicated to pianist Stephen Hough, who gave the work its world premiere at the Wavendon Festival in England in 1983. The Sonata Notturna has been recorded by David Korevaar for Musical Heritage Society and by Margaret Mills for Cambria.

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