Rachmaninoff refered to his Third Concerto as his "piece
for elephants." If this is true, his Second Sonata would have
to be his piece for rhinocerouses. It is similar structurally and
technically to the concerto. Composed in 1913, the sonata, like
the Third Concerto of 1909, was not an instant success with the
public. It's technical challenges and musical layers transcended
almost everything else in the literature at the time. With great
thanks to the genious of Rachmaninoff and his surperior understanding
of the keyboard, this work's technical feats are made bearable for
the trained pianist. The musical aspects, on the other hand, are
less conquerable. There are few who have been able to express this
work well. Rachmaninoff left us with no recording, and quite frankly,
he didn't like the piece. It brought him a great deal of frustration.
As with his Third Concerto, Rachmaninoff felt that Horowitz played
the Second Sonata better than himself and considered Horowitz's
performance authoritative. In fact, after Rachmaninoff revised this
work and was still dissasisfied with its setting, he gave Horowitz
indefinite authority to do with the work what he pleased. The details
regarding this sonata and Horowitz's changes are discussed in detail
in these webpages. In 1986 John Browning recorded and did a great
amount of research on the original version of this sonata. His findings
and research are presented here as well. When appropriate or interesting,
I have added further information to Browning's text. In the Recordings
section, I have included reviews of the recordings in my collection
and links to where you can buy the CD and see the tracking info.
Rachmaninoff began work on the Second Sonata three years after the
publication of his Third Piano Concerto. After an exhausting winter,
he made the decision to spend the summer of 1913 in Rome. "In
Rome I was able to take the same flat on the Piazza di Spagna which
Modest Tchaikovsky had used for a long time and which had served
his brother as a temporary retreat from his numerous friends...
All day long I spent at the piano or the writing table, and not
until the sinking sun gilded the pines on the Monte Pincio did I
put away my pen. In this way I finished my Second Sonata for pianoforte...
which I long to revise as I am not satisfied with the setting I
gave it at that time. This I dedicated to the friend of my boyhood,
Pressmann." The autograph gives the date and place of completion
for the first movement as 12 August 1913, Ivanovka and for the second
and third movements as 18 September 1913, Moscow. Although there
appears to have been a performance by the composer in November 1913
at St. Petersburg, most commentators cite 3 December 1913, Moscow,
as the official premiere.
Excerpts from the editorial notes
of the International Music Company Edition of this Sonata by John
Browning
Here are images of the program from the concert when Rachmaninoff
first performed this monumental work in 1913.
(Click to enlarge)
|