Greetings
I like that piece also and still play it (and have since I was twelve). I have heard recordings where the E is played throughout, the D throughout and both notes used in various renditions at the end.
As I don't have any of the Urtexts of this piece, I can't comment as to what it has.
Anyone?
Cheers
allthumbs
I have only one Urtext Edition. The D (Re) is throughout the whole piece, and nothing else is mentioned in few critical notes or preface.
Some quotes of Preface and critical notes:
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Urtext Edition UT 50053 - Shott/Universal Edition - Red cover - "Fur Elise" WoO 59 - Edited from the autograph and the first edition and with fingering added by Alfred Brendel, taken from the volume Beethoven, Piano Pieces, Wiener Urtext Edition No 50003.
Source: First printing : Nohl's "Neeue Beethovenbriefe", 1867. The MS that served Nohl as a source is lost. Max Unger suspects that the recipient of the piece was Therese Malfatti, whom Beethoven admired; in this case, Nohl must have read "Elise" for "Therese", which does not really surprise anyone who has seen Beethoven's handwriting. In First printing the pedal markings in b. 12/13, 39, 47/48, 53/54 and 57/58 are wanting; they have been added on the basis of parallel passages.
Composed in 27 April 1810 when Beethoven was considering proposing marriage to Therese Malfatti.
The melancholy - even depressive - charm of this Albumleaf shows Beethoven from an unusual angle. According to Nottebohm, the piece appeared in the manuscript, which is now lost, as No.12 of a set of bagatelles; Beethoven used some of the rest in the Bagatelles Opp. 119 and 126.
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Anyone has another urtext edition?
{}s Pedro