In 1742, E. Bach dedicated the six sonatas (composed
in 1740) to
Frederick the Great. The title-page runs thus:—
Sei Sonate
per Cembalo
che all’ Augusta Maesta
di
Frederico II.
Re di Prussia
D.D.D.
l’Autore
Carlo Filippo Emanuele Bach
Musico di Camera di S.M.
Alle spese di Balth. Schmid
in Norimberga.
And in the obsequious dedication, the composer describes them as works “debolissimo Talento mio.” As Bach’s earliest published sonatas, they are, for our purpose, of special interest. Their order is as follows:—
Sonata 1, in F Poco Allegro, Andante, Vivace.
" 2, " B flat Vivace, Adagio,
Allegro assai.
" 3, " E Poco Allegro,
Adagio, Presto.
" 4, " C minor Allegro, Adagio,
Presto.
" 5, " C Poco Allegro,
Andante, Allegro assai.
" 6, " A Allegro, Adagio,
Allegro.
The first and last movements of all six are in binary form. In the five major sonatas, the first sections close in the key of the dominant, and in the one minor sonata (No. 4), in the relative major. The opening movement of each sonata is in early sonata-form: the second section starts with the principal theme, or a brief allusion to it; but then, after a short development with modulation, there is a return to the principal key and to the principal theme.[62] The final movements, on the other hand, are of the usual suite order. Of interest and, indeed, of importance in our history of development are the contents of the first section of the opening movements. In some of the Scarlatti sonatas (see No. 56) there is to be found a fairly definite second subject in the dominant key, or, in the case of a minor piece, in the dominant minor or relative major. Here the process of differentiation is continued; in the 2nd Sonata the contrast between the two subjects is specially marked. We give the opening bar of each—
[Music illustration]
In most of the developments the composer steers clear of the principal key, so that at the return of the principal theme it may appear fresh. To such a method, since Beethoven, we are quite accustomed; but it is curious how little attention—even with the example of E. Bach before him—Haydn paid to such an effective means of contrast in some of his early sonatas. In Bach’s No. 6, in A, the development assumes unusual magnitude; it is even longer than the first section. And it is not only long, but interesting. One passage, of which we quote a portion, has rather a modern appearance:[63]—
[Music illustration]
The return of the principal theme is preceded by an unexpected entry of the opening bars in B minor,—a first sign of that humour which afterwards formed so prominent a feature in Bach’s music. And the theme itself, after the opening notes, is dealt with in original fashion.