- Sonata for Solo Violin (Bartók)
The Sonata for Solo Violin Sz. 117, BB 124, is a sonata for unaccompanied
violin composed by Béla Bartók.Composition
Violinist Yehudi Menuhin commissioned a work for solo violin from Bartók in November
1943 . It was written in New York and inAsheville , North Carolina, where Bartók underwent treatment forleukemia . Bartók finished composing the piece in March1944 . He wrote letters to Menuhin in April and June 1944 to agree on minor changes to make the Sonata easier to play.The Sonata
The Sonata consists of four movements:
# Tempo di ciaccona
# Fuga (Risoluto, non troppo vivo)
# Melodia (Adagio)
# Presto.The Tempo di ciaccona is written somewhat in the style of a
chaconne , with a recognizable harmonic and rhythmic pattern stated at the beginning and subjected to increasing variations.The Fuga begins with a three-voice
fugue on a pulsating,staccato melody. After a section where the melody is accompanied quietly with fast running notes, it returns as a series of chords, alternately played with the bow and plucked.The Melodia begins with a lyrical melody, stated alone and in all different registers of the instrument. It continues in sixths, octaves, and tenths, accompanied by trills and tremolos.
The Presto alternates between a very quiet, fast, bumblebee-like passage played with a mute, and a cheerful melody. Bartók originally wrote the rapid passages in quarter-tones, but many violinists choose to perform a version, suggested by Menuhin, that only uses the standard 12 notes of Western classical music.
The Solo Sonata presents violinists with many difficulties and uses the full gamut of violin techniques: several notes played simultaneously (multiple stops), artificial harmonics, left-hand
pizzicato executed simultaneously with a melody played with the bow, and wide leaps between pitches.ources
Bartók, Béla (1994). "Sonata for Solo Violin: Urtext Edition". New York: Boosey and Hawkes.
Menuhin, Yehudi (1976). "Unfinished Journey". New York: Alfred Knopf.
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