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Hyperion Records

Piano Sonata No 2 in B flat minor, Op 35
composer
third movement originally composed as a separate piece in 1837; completed in Nohant in 1839; published 1840; 'Funeral March' Sonata
Recordings
Cover of 'Chopin: Piano Sonatas Nos 2 & 3' (CDA30006)
Cover of 'Chopin: Piano Sonatas Nos 2 & 3' (CDA67706)
Cover of 'Chopin: The Complete Works' (CDS44351/66)
Cover of 'Percy Grainger – The complete 78-rpm solo recordings' (APR7501)
Cover of 'Yakov Flier – Chopin, Kabalevsky & Rachmaninov' (APR5665)
Cover of 'Alfred Cortot – The Late Recordings, Vol. 4 – Schumann, Schubert, Chopin & Liszt' (APR5574)
Cover of 'Irene Scharrer – The complete electric and selected acoustic recordings' (APR6010)
Cover of 'Vladimir Horowitz – The complete solo European recordings' (APR6004)
Details
Movement 1: Grave – Doppio movimento
Track 5 on CDS44351/66 CD1 [5'14] 16CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
Track 2 on CDA30006 [6'49] Hyperion 30th Anniversary series
Track 2 on CDA67706 [6'49]
Track 9 on APR6004 CD1 [7'05] 2CDs for the price of 1 — 2CDs Temporarily out of stock
Track 1 on APR5665 [5'44]
Track 1 on APR7501 CD4 [5'34] 5CDs
Movement 2: Scherzo
Track 6 on CDS44351/66 CD1 [7'11] 16CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
Track 3 on CDA30006 [5'47] Hyperion 30th Anniversary series
Track 3 on CDA67706 [5'47]
Track 2 on APR5665 [6'59]
Track 2 on APR7501 CD4 [5'57] 5CDs
Movement 3: Marche funèbre
Track 7 on CDS44351/66 CD1 [7'09] 16CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
Track 4 on CDA30006 [7'25] Hyperion 30th Anniversary series
Track 4 on CDA67706 [7'25]
Track 3 on APR5665 [9'13]
Track 31 on APR5574 [5'45]
Track 3 on APR7501 CD4 [6'27] 5CDs
Track 15 on APR6010 CD2 [3'39] 2CDs for the price of 1
Movement 4: Presto
Track 8 on CDS44351/66 CD1 [1'33] 16CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
Track 5 on CDA30006 [1'38] Hyperion 30th Anniversary series
Track 5 on CDA67706 [1'38]
Track 4 on APR5665 [1'26]
Track 4 on APR7501 CD4 [1'46] 5CDs
Piano Sonata No 2 in B flat minor, Op 35
EnglishFrançaisDeutsch
Two years after composing the Op 27 Nocturnes, Chopin wrote a Marche funèbre (1837). It was shortly after his hopes of marriage to Teresa Wodzinska had been dashed, but perhaps we should be cautious about inferring too much from that. At any rate two years later, during the summer of 1839 (the first of the seven highly productive summers he spent at George Sand’s country estate at Nohant in the French provinces), he wrote a further three movements to complete his Piano Sonata No 2 in B flat minor Op 35. The work was published the following year (1840). This time Schumann was not so generous. His reference to the four movements as ‘four unruly children smuggled under this name into a place they could not otherwise have penetrated’ is intriguing. As a criticism it is hardly fair, criticizing Chopin for failing to achieve something that was never really in his sights, but at the same time it does point to what is really singular about this work. Of course it is possible to relate it to the historical archetype of the Austro-German sonata (the overall shape, with the funeral march following rather than preceding the scherzo, is close to Beethoven’s Op 26, a sonata that Chopin taught and played), but really Chopin was trying to create something quite different: a new kind of sonata, albeit based on the old kind. Essentially he used the sonata genre as a framework within which the achievements of his earlier music—the figurative patterns of the Études and Preludes, the cantilenas of the Nocturnes, and even the periodicity of the dance pieces—might be drawn together in a kind of synthesis.

It is possible, for example, to analyse the first movement as a sonata form with the inverted reprise that is so characteristic of Chopin (compare the Ballades). But equally it is possible to hear it as a double cycle where figurative patterns are followed by cantilenas. Moreover, just as Nocturnes are embedded in the first movement in this way, so another Nocturne is trapped within the Scherzo and yet another haunts the middle section of the funeral march. In neither of these inner movements does the central song feel like a natural outgrowth of the flanking sections. It remains remote from them, strengthening our impression of a series of contrasted, relatively self-contained musical worlds juxtaposed rather than smoothly joined. And in this reading the notorious finale assumes the character of a baroque-like Étude or Prelude (compare Nos 14 and 19 from the Op 28 Preludes). This in no way diminishes the powerful affective quality of the sequence, where the funeral march yields first to the detached, otherworldly song of its ‘trio’, and then to the disintegrative, harmonically elusive, and purposefully insubstantial finale. But it does reinforce (in a positive way) the gist of Schumann’s observation. The components of this work are formally separated, albeit thematically linked.

from notes by Jim Samson © 2009

Track-specific metadata
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Details for CDS44351/66 disc 1 track 8
Presto
Artists
ISRC
GB-AJY-08-35108
Duration
1'33
Recording date
14 June 1990
Recording venue
Concordia College, Bronxville, New York, USA
Recording producer
Ward Botsford
Recording engineer
Ward Botsford
Hyperion usage
  1. Chopin: The Complete Works (CDS44351/66)
    Disc 1 Track 8
    Release date: November 2008
    16CDs Boxed set (at a special price)
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