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[MUSIC]
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So, I've spoken a bit about the sense of scope and ambition in
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this sonata, and that extends to almost every aspect of its construction.
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Again, the mere presence of a fourth movement is a real novelty in
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a sonata at that point, and the placement of the movements--a sonata form allegro
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followed by a slow movement, followed by the menuet, followed by the rondo--
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that is precisely the formula for the classical symphony.
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So, just as with Haydn and Mozart, the reality of this piece
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being a sonata--being played by one person, probably only in a home,
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rather than by many, probably in a hall--
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means that Beethoven could use the work as a venue for experimentation to a greater
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extent than he could with the symphonies.
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But these early piano sonatas are decidedly more public
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than the solo works of Mozart or Haydn are.
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Somewhat ironically this sense of privacy in
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the piano sonata comes back later in Beethoven's career.
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What is also notably symphonic in Opus 7 is the use of the instrument.
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By that I don't mean that the piano occasionally
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plays something that is meant to imitate an orchestral instrument.
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That's not new to Beethoven, you know, bass lines in Haydn are obviously bassoon-
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like in many cases. There are other examples which are similar.
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What is more meaningful is that in scope, Beethoven really seems to be aiming beyond
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the piano. So, take this passage from later in the exposition
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[MUSIC]
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Beethoven seems to be in search of a
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resonance which is not really inherent to the instrument.
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You have these bell tones in the bass,
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and what happens in the right hand is
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presumably meant to sound like a reverberation around them.
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Now, this is already quite difficult to achieve on a modern piano.
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It must have been nearly impossible on a 1790s fortepiano.
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[MUSIC]