[AMS-announce] CONF: Beethoven's "Tempest" Sonata, Montreal, Feb. 2007
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ams-announce-admin at list.bowdoin.edu
Tue Jan 23 11:19:54 EST 2007
From February 8 to 10, 2007, the Schulich School of Music of McGill University, Montreal, Canada, will host an international symposium devoted to a single composition: Beethoven's "Tempest" Sonata (in D minor, Op. 31, No. 2), a work that represents a turning point in music history, raising questions about aesthetics, instrument, performance, and form.
This three-day event will bring together pianists, historians, and theorists from Belgium, Canada, and the United States around this one piece, which lends itself particularly well to different approaches and perspectives. At the core of the project are connections of scholarship and performance.
More workshop in spirit than formal conference, events will consist of seminar-type presentations, performances, and an open discussion forum.
Attendance is free.
Preliminary Schedule of Events
Thursday, February 8, 2007
1:301:45 Welcoming Remarks
1:452:30 PERFORMANCE
Daniel Steibelt, LOrage précédé dun rondeau pastorale (from his concerto Nr. 3, Op. 33, 1798), Erin Helyard (McGill), fortepiano
Ludwig van Beethoven, Piano Sonata in D minor, Op. 31, No. 2 (Tempest), Tom Beghin (McGill), fortepiano
2:453:45 Jeroen DHoe (Lemmens Institute), Playing (with) Harmony in Beethoven's Op. 31, No. 2
4:005:00 Pieter Bergé (Leuven), To Play or Not to Play: Motivic Connections in Beethoven's Tempest Sonata
Friday, February 9, 2007
9:3010:30 William Caplin (McGill), The Tempest Exposition: A Springboard for Form-Functional Considerations
10:4511:45 Robert Hatten (Indiana), Interpreting the Tempest through Topics, Gestures, and Agency
1:302:30 Tom Beghin (McGill), "Orating the Oracle: The Rhetorical Paradox of Beethoven's Tempest Sonata"
2:453: 45 Markus Neuwirth (Leuven), Listening Forward: What an Expectancy-Based Cognitive Music Analysis Tells Us about Beethovens Tempest Sonata
4:005:00 Steven Vande Moortele (Leuven), Hesitant Openings and Tempestuous Transitions: Ways of Organizing Sonata Form Expositions in the Nineteenth Century
6:15 CONCERT
Ludwig van Beethoven, Three Piano Sonatas, Opus 31:
Number 1 in G Major, Sara Laimon (McGill), piano
Number 2 in D Minor, Richard Raymond (McGill), piano
Number 3 in E-flat Major, Kyoko Hashimoto (McGill), piano
Saturday, February 10, 2007
10:0012:00 Open Forum: Analysis & Performance
Moderator: Robert Hatten, with the participation of Tom Beghin (on the fortepiano) and Richard Raymond (on the modern piano)
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