Clarinet & Piano

Allegro appassionato --- Andante un poco; Adagio --- Allegretto grazioso --- Vivace

Johannes Brahms (1833-1897), German

Quality: 10

Sonata No. 1 in F Minor, op. 120

Difficulty: Solo-8, Accompaniment-9.5

1894

23:27

G. Henle, 1974 (contains both sonatas)

Highest Note: alt. F

Description

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Brahms arranged his string quintet op. 111 for four-hand piano in December 1890. He then told his patrons that "the time has come for you to say goodbye to any further compositions of mine." However, when he heard Richard von Mühlfeld play some of Weber's works with the Meiningen Court Orchestra, he effectively came out of retirement to write for him. In 1891 he wrote the clarinet trio (op. 114) and the clarinet quintet (op. 115) for Mühlfeld; his two sonatas (in the same keys as Weber's concertos) came in the summer of 1894.

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Brahms's sonatas were the first extended works for clarinet and piano since Weber's Grand Duo Concertante, with the possible exception of Schumann's "character pieces".

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There is also a version for viola and piano, arranged by Brahms; however, he felt it to be "clumsy and unsatisying."

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Romantic style: piano is an equal partner, chromaticism, hemiola

Necessary Qualities

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Musicality

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Intense, focused sound

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Air support

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Finger legato

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Some nasty key signatures

Pedagogical Suggestions

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Every note must have its full value (think of it being weighty)

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Listen to recordings until you can hear the piano part in your head

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Think of I (beginning) & III in 1 to emphasize downbeat

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Keep subdividing in head according to what's coming up

Recommended Recordings

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Meyer/Duchable; Erato (contains only movements III & IV)

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Stoltzman/Goode; RCA Victor