{"id":235,"date":"2018-12-26T13:58:42","date_gmt":"2018-12-26T12:58:42","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.popularbeethoven.com\/?p=235"},"modified":"2022-09-18T11:01:21","modified_gmt":"2022-09-18T09:01:21","slug":"beethoven-piano-sonata-no-14-moonlight-sonata","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.popularbeethoven.com\/beethoven-piano-sonata-no-14-moonlight-sonata\/","title":{"rendered":"Beethoven Piano Sonata No. 14 \u2013 Moonlight Sonata"},"content":{"rendered":"
The famous Moonlight sonata, with so many false traditions and interpretations, is in focus in this article. This is a remarkable piece, with emotions so extreme and contrasting, that it stands out as an all time favorite for any audiences throughout history.<\/strong><\/p>\n Beethoven\u2019s famous Moonlight Sonata was born in 1801 as op. 27.\/2. Not a very marketable name, for sure. The Moonlight Sonata (“Mondscheinsonate” in German), this catchy name was given by the poet Ludwig Rellstab<\/a>, much later in the 1830s. He likened the first movement to a boat floating on the lake Lucerne<\/a>, in Switzerland. This name for many critics and aficionados is a nonsense. According to their opinion the first movement is nothing else, but a funeral music and as such there is nothing romantic about it!<\/p>\n What is certain, and by the will of the composer, is the subtitle he put on the score: Sonata quasi una fantasia<\/em>. Meaning, sonata in the manner of fantasy<\/em>. This header was meant for the companion piece as well, op.27\/1. It certainly points to the dream like, free-flowing improvisation that is the main character of this piece. Two contrasting worlds: sonata<\/em> with its structural order and fantasy<\/em> with its freedom.<\/p>\n The two sonatas are having their own and different lives. One, the first of the two under op. 27 is almost unknown, the second, the Moonlight is one of the best known works of Beethoven. Not only in his time it overshadowed later works (to the irritation of the Master), but even today it continues to impress. In 2004 in Australia, for example people voted it to be the most loved piano music ever. Later, this magazine will do justice to the first composition as it is also to be considered a remarkable piece!<\/p>\n The Moonlight Sonata, like almost all Beethoven\u2019s piano works, was unique and outstanding in its time. Most sonatas in that era consisted a lively, thematically strong first movement, a subdued second movement and a vivacious finale. By contrast this sonata has a dreamy first, a somewhat more lively second and a fury third movement. So much so, that legend has it, during the premier many strings snapped by the heavy hands of Beethoven…<\/p>\n