![]() ![]() Probably composed during the summer and autumn of 1827. It is a mistake, therefore, to think of these works as pseudo sonatas they are groups of beautiful and finely contrasted pieces, and should be enjoyed as such. This is of course nonsense, for the opening movement in each set is quite untypical of Schubert's sonata form the second movement of D899 is not in the least like a normal scherzo, minuet, or slow movement and neither last movement has the feeling of a sonata-finale. It has sometimes been suggested that the Impromptus are sonatas in disguise and Schumann even wrote that D935 could be made into a fine three-movement sonata by omitting the third movement which, for some inexplicable reason, he found "wholly devoid of invention or fancy'. Like so many of Schubert's works, their subsequent history was chequered: D935 did not appear in print until eleven years after his death: and though movements I and II of D899 were published soon after they were written, III and IV did not see the light of day until thirty years later-with the third movement printed in G instead of G flat and its bar-lengths halved in order to make it easier for amateurs to read. The Impromptus were written during the latter half of 1827, which also saw the completion of masterpieces such as the song-cycle Winterreise, the Piano Trio in E flat, and the great C major Symphony. ![]() (Earlier single movements either belong to unfinished sonatas or stand alone.) Throughout his short working life Schubert wrote many sonatas for his own beloved instrument the piano yet curiously enough, his only sets of piano pieces-the Moments Musicaux, D780, Impromptus, D899 and D935, and Drei Klavierstücke, D946-are all late works. ![]()
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