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John Corigliano : Sonata for Violin and Piano


Publisher G Schirmer Inc
Category
Works for 2-6 Players
Sub-Category Piano + 1 Instrument
Year Composed
1963
Duration 24 Minutes
Orchestration
vn/pf
Availability Sale from Musicroom or Music Dispatch  Explain this...
Discography
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Score and Part(s)(s) 50290200 Score and Part(s)(s) GS29020

Programme Note



Winner of the Festival of Two Worlds prize for chamber music, 1964
The Sonata, written during 1962-63, is for the most part a tonal work although it incorporates non-tonal and poly-tonal sections within it as well as other 20th century harmonic, rhythmic and constructional techniques. The listener will recognize the work as a product of an American writer although this is more the result of an American writing music than writing ‘American’ music – a second-nature, unconscious action on the composer’s part. Rhythmically, the work is extremely varied. Meters change in almost every measure, and independent rhythmic patterns in each instrument are common. The Violin Sonata was originally entitled Duo, and therefore obviously treats both instruments as co-partners. Virtuosity is of great importance in adding color and energy to the work which is basically an optimistic statement, but the virtuosity is always motivated by musical means. To cite an example: the last movement rondo includes in it a virtuosic polyrhythmic and polytonal perpetual motion whose thematic material and accompaniment figures are composed of three distinct elements derived from materials stated in the beginning of the movement. The 16th-note perpetual motion theme is originally a counterpoint to the movement’s initial theme. Against this are set two figures – an augmentation of the movement’s primary theme and, in combination with that, a 5/8 rhythmic ostinato utilized originally to accompany a totally different earlier passage. All three elements combine to form a new virtuoso perpetual motion theme which is, of course, subjected to further development and elaboration.


--John Corigliano

Reviews

  • ...flowing lyricism and rugged chromaticism...
    Allan Kozinn, The New York Times
  • ...The highlight of the evening was John Corigliano's prize-winning 1963 Sonata for Violin and Piano. Far too rarely heard, the sonata is a tour de force for the violin, and in Pine's hands it surged to life — a complex and infinitely fascinating work whose Andantino contains some of the loveliest and most delicate music written in the past half-century.
    Stephen Brookes, Washington Post

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