Piano Sonata No. 1
- Composer
- Alexander Nikolayevich Scriabin
- Type
- Sonata
- Opus
- Op. 6
- Tonality
- F minor
- Year composed
- 1892
- Instruments
- Piano
Free sheet music
About
The Piano Sonata No. 1 in F minor, opus 6, by Alexander Scriabin, was the first of ten piano sonatas which Scriabin composed throughout his career. It was completed in 1892. The key of the sonata is the dark key of F minor. The music is emotionally charged as much of the music was written after Scriabin had damaged his right hand through excessive piano playing.
Background
Alexander was reportedly overpracticing Liszt's "Don Juan Fantasy" and Balakirev's Islamey when he damaged his right hand. He was informed by physicians that he would never play again. The first piano sonata was Scriabin's personal cry against God: the tragedy of the loss of a virtuoso pianist to whimsical fate, God's design. During this period of disability, he wrote the Prelude and Nocturne, op. 9 for left hand alone; however, in due course his right hand recovered.
Structure and content
The sonata is in four movements, and takes approximately 18–20 minutes to perform:
The second movement, in C minor, is a very sad "Adagio" in ternary form, ending quietly in C major.
The third movement, "Presto", in F minor again, is in a rather condensed and compact Rondo form. The movement is harsh and agitated, relieved briefly only by the more tender middle theme in A-flat major, and angrily hammers into an unresolved end, which is resolved in the final slow movement, the "Funèbre", again in F minor, and similar in mood to the funeral march of Chopin's second piano sonata. The gloom is unrelieved right up to the bleak ending in F minor.
The above text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License ( creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ ). It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Sonata No. 1 (Scriabin)" ( en.wikipedia.org/ ... iki/Sonata_No._1_(Scriabin) ).
Background
Alexander was reportedly overpracticing Liszt's "Don Juan Fantasy" and Balakirev's Islamey when he damaged his right hand. He was informed by physicians that he would never play again. The first piano sonata was Scriabin's personal cry against God: the tragedy of the loss of a virtuoso pianist to whimsical fate, God's design. During this period of disability, he wrote the Prelude and Nocturne, op. 9 for left hand alone; however, in due course his right hand recovered.
Structure and content
The sonata is in four movements, and takes approximately 18–20 minutes to perform:
- Allegro con fuoco
- Adagio
- Presto
- Funèbre
The second movement, in C minor, is a very sad "Adagio" in ternary form, ending quietly in C major.
The third movement, "Presto", in F minor again, is in a rather condensed and compact Rondo form. The movement is harsh and agitated, relieved briefly only by the more tender middle theme in A-flat major, and angrily hammers into an unresolved end, which is resolved in the final slow movement, the "Funèbre", again in F minor, and similar in mood to the funeral march of Chopin's second piano sonata. The gloom is unrelieved right up to the bleak ending in F minor.
The above text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License ( creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ ). It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Sonata No. 1 (Scriabin)" ( en.wikipedia.org/ ... iki/Sonata_No._1_(Scriabin) ).


