The Violin Sonata No. 7 in C minor by Ludwig van Beethoven, the second of his Op. 30 set, was composed between 1801 and 1802, published in May 1803, and dedicated to Tsar Alexander I of Russia.
It has four movements:
Allegro con brio (in C minor)
Adagio cantabile (in A-flat major)
Scherzo: Allegro (in C major)
Finale: Allegro; Presto (in C minor)
The work's opening movement is the first of Beethoven's sonata first movements that does not repeat the exposition.Basil Lam, 'Beethoven String Quartets' (1979 edition, BBC publications; p. 47) The development section contains a theme not found in the exposition (this happens in earlier compositions such as the fourth violin sonata also).
As the author notes, the practice of including new material in the central section of a ternary-form (sonata) movement is not a Beethoven innovation- there are examples in and preceding Mozart's music.
The work takes approximately 26 minutes to perform.
The second movement was originally sketched out in G major before taking its current form.
According to Anton Schindler (Beethoven's notoriously unreliable associate and biographer), Beethoven came to regret the third movement.
Schindler wrote, "He definitely wished to delete the Scherzo allegro... because of its incompatibility with the character of the work as a whole."
Schindler, Anton; ed. MacArdle, Donald W.
<I>Beethoven as I Knew Him</I>, Courier Corporation (1966), p. 403
The autograph to the sonata turned up in a collection built up by H. C. Bodmer in Zurich, discovered in the mid-20th century.
References
External links
Performance of Violin Sonata No. 7 by Corey Cerovsek (violin) and Paavali Jumppanen (piano) from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in MP3 format
- this is for the Allegro con brio
- this is for the Finale
Violin Sonata 07 Category:1802 compositions Category:Compositions in C minor Category:Music with dedications
