Violin Sonata in D major (Hindemith)

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The Sonata in D for piano and violin op. 11 No. 2 is a chamber music work composed in 1918 by Paul Hindemith .

Emergence

The violin sonata was written at the end of the First World War , between September and November 1918. It is based on the music of Romanticism and Impressionism . Hindemith originally referred to the work as " Sonatina " and numbered it Op. 11 No. 3. He chose the art-loving Frankfurt couple Abdul (Alfred) Linder and his wife Olly Linder as the dedicatee.

The musicians Max Strub (violin) and Eduard Zuckmayer (piano), brother of the writer Carl Zuckmayer , premiered the approx. 20-minute piece in Frankfurt am Main on April 10, 1920 .

In 1920 the piece was moved to Schott in Mainz. The 24-page score owned by Alfred Wolf is kept at the Hindemith Institute in Frankfurt am Main. The work has been handed down to the Hindemith Complete Edition since 1976 in Volume V, 6 (Chamber Music III) edited by Peter Cahn .

construction

  1. Lively
  2. Calm and measured
  3. With the timing and character of a fast dance. Fresh and always moving

Recordings

Others

The violin sonata is listed on the literature list in the category “Duo: piano and a string instrument” by Jugend musiziert .

literature

  • Michael Hoffmann: Sonata in D for piano and violin op.11 No. 2 . In: Harenberg, Culture Guide Chamber Music . 3rd completely revised edition, Meyers Lexikonverlag, Mannheim 2008, ISBN 978-3-411-07093-0 , p. 357 f.
  • Heinz-Jürgen Winkler: Hindemith's violin sonatas . In: Hindemith-Forum 3/2001, pp. 3–5.

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Stephen Luttmann: Paul Hindemith: A Research and Information Guide (= Routledge Music Bibliographies ). 2nd edition, Routledge, New York et al. a. 2009, ISBN 978-0-415-99416-3 , p. 399.
  2. Duo: piano and a string instrument , jugend-musiziert.org, accessed on February 9, 2019.