Medtner - Violin Sonata No. 2 in G major, Op. 44 (1925) (Reupload)

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 5 ก.ค. 2024
  • Laurence Kayaleh, violin
    Paul Stewart, piano
    This video was blocked in December for some reason, so here's a reupload.
    0:00 I. Introduzione. Maestoso (poco quasi cadenza)
    2:06 Allegro appassionato
    16:39 Cadenza I
    17:49 II. Tema con variazioni. Andante
    28:07 Cadenza II
    29:04 III. Rondo (Finale). Allegro risoluto
    Structural outline in the comments, because it's too long for the description box. As always, this outline does not even begin to explore all that is interesting about this work, and serves only to acquaint one with its larger structure.
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ความคิดเห็น • 16

  • @sama.4471
    @sama.4471 3 ปีที่แล้ว +20

    When I first heard this work (along with the third violin sonata) a few years back, I was in complete awe and it was an absolute revelation to me. Filled with such a magical and sweeping sense of fantasy, mystery, at times ecstasy and other times tragedy. It is one of the all time great masterpieces of the genre, without a doubt, but so criminally unknown and underappreciated

  • @alankuo2402
    @alankuo2402  4 ปีที่แล้ว +23

    MOVEMENT I (SONATA FORM)
    INTRODUCTION
    0:00 Two motives are introduced: Int-1, a noble motto theme that permeates the entire sonata; and Int-2, with a gentle, caressing contour. Int-1 is immediately subjected to imitation, and Int-2 to diminution in a cadenza-like passage in the violin.
    0:56 Int-3, a short repeated-chord figure that resembles the Muse-theme used by Medtner in several other works. This motive reappears in extended form as the movement’s third theme. Second cadenza passage, now in the piano.
    1:32 piu mosso, more Int-1. Third cadenza passage, in violin, that leads to…
    FIRST THEME (G MAJOR)
    2:06 T1-1 Bright, rollicking theme with sextuplet accompaniment
    2:35 T1-2 Downward chromatic motion
    SECOND THEME (B MINOR->D MAJOR)
    2:58 T2. Turbulent, syncopated theme that seems to ricochet about wildly, passing back and forth between violin and piano.
    3:40 T1-1 reappears, leading into T3
    THIRD THEME (G MINOR->?)
    3:56 Int-1
    4:06 T3-1, an extension of Int-3. Somber yet serene melody with little aspiration. Development achieved through repetition in different registers and textural backdrops.
    4:27 T3-2. Brief subsidiary phrase that reaches upward then wilts downward.
    4:55 Int-1 is woven into the texture against T3-1, increasing tension.
    CLOSING
    5:20 Int-1, Int-2
    5:40 T1-1
    6:03 Int-1, T1-1. V-I D Major
    DEVELOPMENT
    6:35 T3-1, T1-1. An inverted ninth chord! Somebody call the Vienna Music Society!
    7:10 T3-1, with Int-2 accompanying in three different note values (quarter, 8th, 16th). Pedal tones in bass.
    7:33 Int-1 appears in the bass, while three simultaneous instances of T3-1 heightens tension
    7:57 T1-1
    8:10 T1-1, T3-1, with solos for both piano and violin
    8:55 T3-2 and T1-2 introduce chromatic motion, darkening the atmosphere
    9:44 Chromatic movement in both instruments continue to heighten tension
    9:56 T1-1 in menacing bass octaves
    10:20 Partial restatement of T2 in development. Second theme does not appear in recapitulation.
    10:58 Int-1, T1-1, and Int-2 announce recapitulation
    RECAPITULATION
    FIRST THEME (G MAJOR)
    11:24 T1-1. Near-exact but truncated repetition.
    THIRD THEME (C MINOR->?)
    12:08 T3-1. Violin accompanies piano entry with delicate pirouettes.
    12:35 T3-2
    13:02 Int-1 joins T3-1
    CLOSING
    13:27 Int-1, Int-2
    13:47 T1-1
    13:57 T2 makes its brief appearance here due to it being in the development
    14:30 T1-2 appears in heavy imitation
    CODA
    15:05 Int-1, T1-2. Arrival at G major.
    15:34 T1-1, T1-2, Int-1, and T2 return in dense counterpoint, three or four simultaneously
    CADENZA I
    16:39 Int-1 in the piano, while the violin plays a melodic line that includes Cad-1, a similarly contoured 3-note cell that makes up most of the two cadenzas and appears in the final movement’s A theme. Virtuoso cadenza for violin.
    MOVEMENT II (THEME AND VARIATIONS)
    THEME
    17:49 A plaintive, unmistakably Russian theme in two sections - the violin first plays each section solo, in bleak chords and double-stops, and the piano repeats in fuller harmonization
    19:06 Return of A section with arpeggiated accompaniment
    VARIATION I
    19:30 Straightforward embellishment of the theme with triplets, violin scales, and dance rhythms, with some chromatic turns. Cad-1 appears.
    VARIATION II
    21:23 A graceful descending figure is the basis of this variation, while the theme makes fleeting appearances in compressed form amid the texture. Highly chromatic.
    VARIATION III
    23:31 A lively ternary scherzo in A major. Two new melodies are introduced in the violin (the first of which resembles a theme from the Danza of Medtner’s first violin sonata), while the piano plucks out the theme in staccato.
    23:56 The B theme appears almost undetectably in the last sixteenth of each beat.
    25:26 Return of the A section, with the two new melodies played simultaneously.
    VARIATION IV
    24:46 A busy 6/8 dance. The A theme’s is embellished melodically and rhythmically.
    VARIATION V
    25:50 Theme A is played at double speed in the violin and normal speed in the piano.
    VARIATION VI
    26:30 Tempest-esque two-note slurs pervade this variation, accompanying both A and B sections.
    28:49 Balalaika-like strumming concludes the movement.
    CADENZA II
    28:07 Opens similarly to the first cadenza, but the focus is shifted to the piano.
    28:58 Sudden pentatonic chords
    MOVEMENT III (RONDO ABACABA Coda)
    One of Medtner’s few (only?) rondo forms. It may be seen as a hybrid sonata and rondo form. Of the four A sections, the first and third act as first themes, while the second and fourth act as transitional closing sections bridging B->C and B->Coda. The lyrical B section reaches a huge climax in its second appearance - the “big tune” second theme, as it were. The central C section incorporates A and B section material in addition to its own, thus acting as development.
    A (G MAJOR)
    29:04 Dramatic pentatonic opening comprised of Cad-1.
    29:20 A-1. Fanfare-like theme with characteristic rhythm. Underneath, the words “весна идет” (“Spring is coming”). Cad-1 appears in the theme.
    29:37 A-2. Falling melodic phrase. major
    30:13 A-2, minor
    30:19 A-3
    B (B MAJOR)
    30:59 Violin plays the tender theme (B-1, B-2) over rippling quintuplets in the piano. The constantly unstable harmony prevents a real climax from being achieved. Structurally acts as a sonata’s second theme.
    32:11 A sudden staccato chord snaps us out of our trance and leads toward the second A section.
    A (G MAJOR)
    32:22 This section serves mostly as a transition from B to C (i.e. sonata closing theme/section) using A section material. Opens on a I6/4 chord in tonic G major but a resolution is sidestepped.
    C (ALSO DEVELOPMENTAL)
    A contrastingly energetic section imbued with lively dance rhythms.
    32:59 C-1. Stern chords and bass octaves.
    33:13 C-2. Drooping melodic phrase.
    33:21 C-3. Fierce repeated notes.
    33:40 Counterpoint with C-1 and C-2.
    34:03 B-1 appears in the bass.
    34:16 C-3, now with A-1.
    34:30 B-1 again, in canon.
    34:44 A-1 against C-3, building tension towards return to C-1.
    35:03 C-1, triumphantly and in canon
    A (G MAJOR)
    35:29 Tonic G major is inconspicuously achieved through ii-V-I movement against static accompaniment. Muted fanfare of root seventh chords announces return of A-1.
    35:59 A-2, major
    36:26 Fragmentation of A-1 clarifies relation to Cad-1
    36:36 A-2, violin
    36:41 A-3
    B (F MAJOR->?)
    36:59 Floating in reverie. B-1 and B-2 in piano left hand, while violin spins out B-2 with fragments of Theme 1-1 and 1-2 (from the first movement, indicating cyclic unity).
    38:00 Speed picks up with B-1 in both instruments, arpeggio quintuplets return
    38:34 B-2, growing quickly in intensity
    38:51 Climax of B-2, and emotional climax of the whole sonata (in my opinion). B-1 sawed out in fortissimo octaves in the violin.
    A
    39:09 A short transition to the coda. Completely chromatic motion.
    CODA
    39:50 T1-1 against chromatically moving A-1 in the bass.
    40:27 T3-1 (first movement) peeks out during a brief rest, but is quickly overtaken by…
    40:33 A-2, G major definitively reached
    40:42 Triumphant return of Int-1 with violin chords and piano
    40:52 C-3
    41:06 The movement ends with inverted Cad-1, mirroring the opening

  • @benlindsay6012
    @benlindsay6012 3 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    In some ways the general style of this monumental sonata reminds me of Beethoven's last period. Thanks for posting this gem!

  • @vaclavmiller8032
    @vaclavmiller8032 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Great to see this back up!

  • @thirtythreepi
    @thirtythreepi 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    the final movement of his 2nd piano concerto is also a rondo!

  • @jacklevinson1
    @jacklevinson1 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    thank you very much for posting this!!!!!

  • @verslaflamme8185
    @verslaflamme8185 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    great analysis. thanks.

  • @kumo-kun1831
    @kumo-kun1831 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Excellent video! Will one day we can see the e minor sonata analysis?

  • @JoshuaPluta
    @JoshuaPluta หลายเดือนก่อน

    Have you thought about doing this for the third violin sonata? I would love to see it.

  • @BioProton
    @BioProton 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Thank you so much for uploading this masterpiece! Is your annotated score with all the highlighted themes available?

    • @alankuo2402
      @alankuo2402  2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Unfortunately, I cut the pdf up into images before annotating it, so all I have is a bunch of .pngs.
      drive.google.com/drive/folders/18TaLJ3Nqku-0fHuBCvvlVQnijQwfdthE?usp=sharing

    • @richardwilliamsjr.1470
      @richardwilliamsjr.1470 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@alankuo2402 That's totally okay! Thank you for sharing them

  • @Berlinchesmusic
    @Berlinchesmusic 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    👌👌

  • @user-sn3vl3cn6o
    @user-sn3vl3cn6o 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Метнер очень недооценен!

  • @benjaminsmith3657
    @benjaminsmith3657 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    The first two movements are absolutely phenomenal, Tragedy, beauty, love. The last movement unnecessary.

    • @JoshuaPluta
      @JoshuaPluta ปีที่แล้ว

      That was my conclusion as well at first, but after a few more listens, I'm starting to understand the genius of it, and how integral it is to the progression of the piece.