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A (E major) → B (C major) → A (F major) → C (D minor) → A (E major) Schubert also composes brief transitions at the ends of each episode—that between the B section and the medial A section features a small amount of the B section's material in F major (the medial A section's key), while that between the C section and the final A ...
Twenty-four extant sonatas and sonata fragments are listed in the 1978 version of the Deutsch catalogue: D 154, Piano Sonata in E major (1815, fragment; similarity with the first movement of the Piano Sonata in E major, D 157) I. Allegro (fragment) D 157, Piano Sonata in E major (1815, unfinished – first three movements are extant)
Note that in Schubert's lifetime "Fantasie" (Fantasy) and "Sonate" (Sonata) had a somewhat overlapping meaning: by convention the Wanderer Fantasy was never numbered as a sonata, while D 894, first published as a Fantasie, always was. Other columns in the table: Op.: Opus number, "(p)" or "posth." indicates a posthumous publication.
Piano Sonata in A-flat major, D 557 (Schubert) Piano Sonata in E minor, D 566 (Schubert) Piano Sonata in D-flat major, D 568 (Schubert) Piano Sonata in F-sharp minor, D 571 (Schubert) Piano Sonata in B major, D 575 (Schubert) Piano Sonata in F minor, D 625 (Schubert) Piano Sonata in C-sharp minor, D 655 (Schubert) Piano Sonata No. 13 in A Major ...
Legend to the table column content 1 D '51 Deutsch number in the first version of the Deutsch catalogue (1951) [2]: 2 D utd most recent (utd = up to date) Deutsch catalogue number; [3] the basic collation of the list is according to these numbers – whether or not the possibility to adjust the sorting according to the content of other columns is available depends on the device with which the ...
Compositions in which the beginning only hints at a possible reading of a major key without really establishing it, such as the Brahms Clarinet Quintet, Haydn's two string quartets, Op. 33 No. 1 and Op. 64 No. 2, C. P. E. Bach's Piano Sonata, Wq. 55/3, or the first movement of Alkan's Grande sonate 'Les quatre âges' (all of which are in B ...
in the C minor Sonata, certain passages in the first two movements resemble parallel passages from Beethoven's Piano Sonata No. 8, Op. 13 (the Pathétique), written in the same key. [75] in the A major Sonata, bars 200–206 from the end of the development section in the finale recall bars 51–55 from the first movement of Beethoven's Piano ...
Peter Pesic commented on Donald Francis Tovey's observation that Schubert used a "circle of sixths" series of key signatures in the fourth movement of this sonata, in the sequence G → E ♭ → B = C ♭ → G = A. [6] Pianists Sviatoslav Richter and Paul Lewis stated that this was their favourite Schubert sonata.