One of LVB's final three sonatas, the by-then completely deaf composer dedicated this lyrical and often inward-searching work to Maximiliane Brentano, daughter of Antonie Brentano, the woman whom many scholars--most notably, Maynard Solomon, whose exhaustive study of the matter leaves, really, little doubt--consider Beethoven's Immortal Beloved. What all this means vis a vis the music is hard to say.
Written in 1820, many years passed since the composer cut things off with one of the few women who seemed willing to put up with him and who truly loved him. Elements of pathos and wistful sadness permeate the work, underscored by the overall sunny character of E Major (with plentiful dashes of E minor and other keys remote and close).
One can analyze the work in all sorts of ways. The opening movement, for example, in sonata allegro form, uses marked concision in its use of the idiom. The opening theme lasts only eight bars before the Adagio second theme appears. Although the opening two movements are wonderful, the final movement, a theme with six variations, has been considered by some pianists as Beethoven's ultimate composition. Andras Schiff pronounces it his favorite movement in the 32 sonatas, no small accolade.
Some consider the work one of the more difficult of Beethoven's sonatas; I did my best to do it justice. My first foray into Late Beethoven, I did drop a few notes here and there, especially in the Prestissimo, and hope to get all that corrected by concert time later in June. But voila. Thanks for listening.
Note: I'm having trouble getting the movements up in the right order. Will try to post the Theme and Var 1/2 in a separate post.