Abstract: Having topically surveyed Haydn's principal techniques of through-composition – progressive form, cyclic integration, extramusical associations – we now return to individual compositions. In this chapter we examine a dozen works which are to a greater or lesser degree through-composed: Symphonies 15, 25, 46, 49, 99, and 103; the string quartets Opp. 20 No. 2, 50 No. 4, 54 No. 2, and 74 No. 3; the keyboard sonata Hob. XVI:30; and the piano trio Hob. XV:26 (Others could be added; some of these have been described briefly in Chapters 6 and 7.) These works are varied by genre, date (two very early, one 1768, two 1772, one mid-1770s, two late 1780s, four 1793–95), and mode (eight in the major, four in minor); they also vary as to their likelihood of having had tangible extramusical associations. This broad distribution not only confirms the status of through-composition as a normal (if not necessarily common) aspect of Haydn's art, but disproves any notion that his interest in it might have been restricted to a single genre, period, or stylistic orientation – for example, to overtly exceptional “Sturm und Drang” works such as the Farewell Symphony.
Publication Year: 1991
Publication Date: 1991-07-26
Language: en
Type: book-chapter
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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