Let's see what knowledge we have about this particular piece
- MuseScore, KernScores, piano roll, wrong note finder by Néstor Nápoles López
- IMSLP, see Olga Kleiankina's article on editions
- When in Rome, harmonic analysis, DCML's on-score analysis uploaded to MuseScore
- Taking form, formal analysis
- TuttiTempi navigates through performances and has scrolling music sheet
Craig Sapp, Beethoven Piano Sonata Keyscapes
The dataset has two recordings with CC64 and CC67 markings. Renders below screenshoted from Cubase, is there a better way to render MIDI, esp. in web? Also I'd love to adjoin the tempo track (a-la TuttiTempi?)
- H. A. Harding. Analysis of Form: Beethoven's 32 Piano Sonatas - year 1900. For some reason, neither Caplin 1998 nor Hepokoski (2006, 2020) don't reference this book
Ex. 11.4, also answers for questions below
Ex. 12.2, also answers for questions below
Also mentioned in two exercises for which there are no answers found.
Ch. 8. Subordinate theme
note 13:
note 17:
note 38:
Ch. 9. Transition
note 27:
Ch. 11. Recapitulation
note 39:
Their sonata-allegro theory in a nutshell:
p. 140-141:
p. 238:
p. 314:
Not mentioned in Hepokoski 2020.
What's in there (probably):
-
Kinderman - p. 41-43
-
Tovey - p. 44 - 49
-
Charles Rosen - Beethoven - 134-137
-
Edwin Fischer
-
Eric Blom pianoforte
-
Eileen Stainkamph "Form and analysis of the complete Beethoven's pianoforte sonatas" - not available anywhere. Sample
-
Mark C. Richards. Analyzing Tension and Drama in Beethoven’s First-Movement Sonata Forms
Barry Cooper is skipped for leaning on musicological (i.e. historical) side.
Paul M. Ellison "The Key to Beethoven" - he tries to assign the meaning to key choices. (skipped, esoterics?)
Beethoven-Haus Bonn has early editions and lists a referencing literature which is nowhere to be found :)
We have no idea if Chinese scholars have something valuable to bring to the table. vmus.net doesn't seem to be useful and seems to be superceded by TuttiTempi, see here
- Bogdan Cvetkovic
- Liang Lu, Qing Yang, Li Zhou, Kewen Ji. First movement version of Beethoven's piano sonata No. 5 (OP10 NO.1) velocity image processing and analysis
- Jack F. Boss. “Schenkerian-Schoenbergian Analysis” and Hidden Repetition in the Opening Movement of Beethoven’s Piano Sonata Op. 10, No. 1 - warning
- Lester Allyson Knibbs
- Melanie Spanswick
- Cem Erçelik
- Tonic Chord
- Color coding