I just discovered Alexei Stanchinsky (or Stanshinsky)
Sad story, short life
His music has a Beethovan-like sense of architecture and thematic development. Definitely not a late romantic, like Scriabin and Rachmaninoff.
Just listened to his second sonata.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alexei_Stanchinsky
I’ve listened to this a couple times now. This is the first I’ve heard of this composer – who died in 1914 at age 26 – 2 years after he wrote this 2-movement sonata. This is a very fine work. It is a tonal composition in the key of G major, although the fuga has progressive tonality where it ends in the different key of E major. The first movement is a fuga in essentially 3 voices. His life story is very sad indeed.
From the notes of the publisher on youtube:
"Provocatively, the two movement Second Sonata in G combines old-world Beethovenian baroque homage (a slow opening 6/16 "progressively tonal" Fuga) with new-age assault (a brilliant closing "toccata" in 11/8 - the "modo russico" of Mussorgsky's Pictures."
Thanks for sharing!
Edit: I am a little confused. "In music, accidentals apply to the notes that follow them on the same staff position and line or space for the rest of the measure in which they appear, unless another accidental explicitly changes them.
However, the effect of an accidental ends once a barline is passed, unless a note affected by an accidental is tied to the same note across the barline.
In this sonata, the 2nd movement ends with a G-major chord according to the score, but the performer ends with a G-minor chord. Where did the B-flat come from? A couple measures earlier?
Can anyone explain? Never mind. I think I figured it out. General rules are not always followed. Also, G-minor certainly sounds right.
Edit2: I've noticed this same kind of accidental problem looking at Prokofiev piano scores and other Russian composers of this era. It appears that they do not have consistent rules making it tough for the performer to figure out the notes intended.