Beethoven - Sonata No. 5 - Op. 10, No. 1 - Second Movement

Classical

Difficulty Level: 8

(206,000 Points)

Description:

“Beethoven - Sonata No. 5 - Op. 10, No. 1 - Second Movement” is classified as a Level 8 Piano work worth 206,000 points within the Road to Virtuosity progression system. It is categorized under Composers → Beethoven, Ludwig van and is part of the Classical collection. The sheet music for “Beethoven - Sonata No. 5 - Op. 10, No. 1 - Second Movement” provided on this website is available for non-commercial use. This means it may be downloaded, printed, studied, and performed for personal or educational purposes, but it may not be sold, redistributed commercially, or used as part of a paid product without permission.

“Beethoven - Sonata in C Minor - Op. 10, No. 1 - Second Movement” is a large seven-page slow movement marked Adagio molto. Although the sonata is in C minor, this movement is in A-flat major, giving it a warmer and more lyrical contrast after the dramatic first movement. The music is built from a broad cantabile theme, quiet ornamental passagework, sudden Beethoven-style dynamic shocks, chromatic middle episodes, and a long closing section that gradually settles the movement into a calm final cadence.

Measures 1–16 present the main lyrical theme. The right hand carries a slow, singing melody with ornaments, dotted rhythms, and long slurs, while the left hand supports with steady bass notes and inner motion. The opening piano dynamic, cantabile marking, and dolce character give the movement a quiet, noble sound rather than a dramatic beginning.

Measures 17–28 continue the opening section with stronger contrasts and more decorative motion. The music briefly reaches forte and then drops back into piano and pianissimo, using sudden changes of color rather than a large continuous buildup. The right hand becomes more ornamented, while the left hand provides gentle repeated support underneath.

Measures 29–35 move into a lighter, more flowing passage marked leggiero and sempre pp. The right hand runs through quick ornamental figures while the left hand sustains a quiet foundation. This section feels delicate and suspended, but the crescendo near the end begins to push the music toward a more intense middle area.

Measures 36–46 form the main dramatic contrast. The texture becomes more chromatic and expressive, with markings such as ma cant., rinforzando, intenso, sostenuto ed espressivo, and non affrett. The music alternates between lyrical fragments and stronger accented gestures, building toward a forceful ff arrival before the main theme returns.

Measures 47–65 bring back the opening material in a varied and more developed form. The familiar cantabile character returns, but the texture is richer, with more inner motion, fuller harmony, and expressive markings such as dolcissimo, dolce ben tranquillo, and articulato. The music grows again into a strong cadence before softening back into the movement’s calmer voice.

Measures 66–82 continue the return with dramatic interruptions and delicate passagework. The music moves through sharp fp contrasts, sudden dynamic changes, and another leggiero passage in quiet running notes. This section connects the lyrical return to the later closing material while keeping Beethoven’s contrast between tenderness and force.

Measures 83–91 revisit the more intense middle character. The right hand again moves through singing but chromatic figures, while the lower voice adds weight and tension underneath. The markings ma cant., intenso, sostenuto, dolce, and cantabile show that the passage remains expressive even when the harmony and accents become darker.

Measures 92–112 form the final coda. The music becomes more settled and inward, with the marking cantabile, con sentimento giving the ending a deeply lyrical character. The repeated chordal figures gradually soften through decrescendo and meno p, and the final measures close gently in A-flat major. After the movement’s long emotional range, the ending feels peaceful, restrained, and complete.

Interesting fact: Beethoven’s Op. 10, No. 1 is an early sonata, but the second movement already shows the depth and seriousness that would become central to his later slow movements. The contrast between the stormy C minor outer movements and this expansive A-flat major Adagio gives the sonata a much wider emotional world than its relatively early opus number might suggest.

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