Thanks, interesting reading on this cursed day.  (If you are outside the US,
it's the first work day of Day Light Savings Time.  So instead of getting up
at 5 AM, it's 4 AM masquerading as 5 AM by act of Congress.)  

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Gary Greene
Sent: Sunday, March 13, 2011 9:07 PM
To: Horn-List
Subject: [Hornlist] Accompanied Sonatas


On 13 March 2011, [email protected] wrote regarding the Beethoven
Sonata "I had always assumed that this work was for solo horn with piano
accompaniment. I was listening to it yesterday and recalled what Hans has
said about the Mozart work for string and horn, the horn was part of the
ensemble.  Is that the case the Beethoven that it is a work as much for
piano as it is for horn?"
 
The Beethoven sonata, along with his sonatas for cello/piano and
violin/piano are part of the last gasp of a tradition sometimes called the
"accompanied keyboard sonata."  In the middle of the 18th century, keyboard
sonatas were often given an "obligato" instrument which accompanied the
keyboard.  That is, these were, as Hans points out by given us the original
title of the Beethoven horn sonata, keyboard sonatas accompanied by another
instrument and not sonatas for a solo instrument accompanied by the keyboard
(which is how we conceptualize them today).  These were different from a
parallel tradition that involved a solo instrument accompanied by keyboard,
in which latter case the keyboard part was often simply a thoroughbass line
that the keyboardist was expected to realize.  Two different views of a
sonata involving keyboard and solo instrument existing side by side in the
18th century.
 
Having said that, let me add the expected musicological waffling!  :-)
 
1.  That a work might be entitled something like "sonata for piano with horn
accompaniment" does not mean that the piano part could be played minus the
horn as a solo sonata.  The horn part is obbligato (obligatory).
2.  "Accompaniment" did not then carry the negative weight of being a lesser
or merely supporting role.  The term would have suggested a
partnership--chamber music.
3.  Performers today playing such sonatas therefore should not relegate
their keyboard players to the background reflexively; it's a joint effort.
So, [email protected], the answer to your question is "yes."
4.  But in some cases, the musical content DOES indicate a subordinate
relationship of one performer in favor of another, so...it's not a joint
effort.
 
So be aware of these traditions but also look at the music to see if the
composer is communicating a partnership or a lead actor with a supporting
player...and be aware that the supporting player is not necessarily the
keyboard.
 
One other lesson here:  all of this points up the need to know what the
composer wrote.  We usually think of this in terms of pitches and rhythms,
but what a composer calls a piece is very often a clue to his intent.  An
18th-century sinfonie concertante and a concerto for multiple instruments
might strike us today as seeming like pretty much the same thing, but a
composer then was likely thinking of two different kinds of things when he
labeled the pieces as two different genres.  Same way when Wagner has an
oveture for Rienzi but a prelude for Lohengrin--both are instrumental pieces
that open operas, but the terms overture and prelude signal different
conceptualizations.
 
Hope these comments are helpful.
 
Gary Greene, Ph.D.
                                          
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