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[2] 21 sonatas — numbering of Schubert's piano sonatas as most encountered on recordings etc., for instance on the Schubert page at Classical Archives. Also IMSLP follows this numbering for their page names of Schubert's piano sonatas. Wiener Urtext Edition follows the same numbering, except that Op. 122 is No. 8, the ensuing D. 571, 575, 613 ...
The Piano Sonata in G major D. 894, Op. 78 by Franz Schubert is a sonata for solo piano, completed in October 1826. [1] The work is sometimes called the "Fantasie", a title which the publisher Tobias Haslinger, rather than Schubert, gave to the first movement of the work. [ 2 ]
Many, especially the devoted Schubert performers, have recorded the entire sonata trilogy (and often all of Schubert's sonatas or his entire piano repertoire altogether). Others have sufficed with only one or two of the sonatas. Of the three sonatas, the last (in B ♭) is the most famous and most often recorded. The following is an incomplete ...
D 279, Piano Sonata in C major (1815, unfinished – first three movements are extant; the Allegretto in C major, D 346 fragment is probably the fourth movement) D 568, Piano Sonata in D-flat major (1817, 1st version; the last movement is a fragment; the Scherzo in D-flat major, D 593 No. 2 [1] possibly constitutes the third movement)
P. Piano Sonata in A major, D 664 (Schubert) Piano Sonata in A major, D 959 (Schubert) Piano Sonata in A minor, D 537 (Schubert) Piano Sonata in A minor, D 784 (Schubert)
Schubert's Opus 1: "Erlkönig", D 328, fourth version, was published by Diabelli as Schubert's "1 tes Werk" (first work) in 1821.The Lied, composed by Schubert in 1815, was later adopted along with its prior versions as No. 178 in Series XX, Vol. 3 of the AGA (1895), and in Series IV, Vol. 1 of the NSE (1970).
The compositions for violin and piano D 384, 385 and 408 were named Sonata in Schubert's autographs. [ 5 ] [ 6 ] They were named Sonatina when published posthumously as Op. 137 in 1836. [ 7 ] Since these works are modest in size—rather to be compared to Mozart's violin sonatas than to Beethoven's —the "Sonatina" diminutive stuck to them.
Piano Sonata in B ♭ major, S 1.2 (1760) Piano Sonata in C, S. 1.3 (1759 or earlier) Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. Piano Sonata in E ♭ major (K. 282/189f – see Köchel-Verzeichnis) – Has an unusual adagio as the first movement. Piano Sonata in A major (K. 331/300i) Piano Sonata in B ♭ major (K. 333/315c) Piano Sonata in C major (K. 545)