O pianitisimo. Once again your posts make me go, "huh?" But I think this time I can fill in the blanks. I think you should be more specific with the way you use words. For instance, "modulation," doesn't mean one chord which is different then the previous chord. It means a distinct change of key, the result of a progression, not the progression itself.
i beg to disagree. i think beethoven is doing the same to both the tempo I AND the adagio. he is expanding horizons for both.
The first "huh?" Disagree with what? If yo uwant to say something totally general like, "he is expanding horizons" and use that to infer that two completely different sections rae "the same," then go ahead, but don't be surprised when I say, huh? (#2). The adagio is unstable and strange, and the Tempo I is much more conventional in harmony - although I'm remiss to use the word conventional, because it sounds disparaging, and that's not how I mean it. I mean he is contrasting a pure Classical diatonic harmony, with a phantastical, chromatic, unstable thing.
but, i agree with what you said at the beginning - moving to a dominant key. the way in which he does this is unusual, though - because as soon as you think he's in B - he tricks you and adds in a B# in measure 10 - making a diminished 7th chord on A.
First of all there's no B# in measure 10, I think you mean measure 9, you probably just counted the first beat as a full bar, but it's just half a bar. Careful, pianitisimo!
it's really mysterious and misleading until you say 'oh, i see - on measure 11 - where he moves into measure 11 fully in B WITHOUT HAVING CHANGED THE KEY SIGNATURE.
I gathe from your caps that that is somehow an amazing thing, but how often do Classical sonatas express music which is just modulated to the DOMINANT by CHANGING KEY SIGNATURE? NOT VERY OFTEN!
in terms of cliche'd use of harmonies in the tempo I - i would say at measure 18 beethoven breaks the rule by using the B# again. and, at measure 21 - the B natural. he is clearly doing a mystery move.
Huh? (#3) You've got your measure numbers all wrong. Are you referring to the B natural in m 22? First of all, or I guess second of all, I am also remiss to use the word cliche, because I don't mean it in a bad way. i only mean he takes a gesture, a cycle through the circle of fifths, which is conventional, and elevates it onto a plane where it sustains itself as an expressive vehicle, in other words, it exists for the sake of itself, it's been elevated.
Third of all, your harmonic analysis is incomplete because you are just focussing on single notes. If you looked more carefully, you would realize how conventional this is: the B# is to lead us into c-# minor, the relative minor of teh tonic; the B natural is part of G-# minor, the relative minor of the dominant, and please don't bring up the f-double-#, which leads us into G-# minor, or the C-double-#, which leads us into the relative minor of the dominant of the dominant. Recognize a pattern here? The Circle of Fifths.
But I don't know why I typed all of this, because I am not even sur if you are arguing with me, or just typing something unrelated to what I was saying. But there it is, I hope that helps someone.
Walter Ramsey