The Piano Sonata in D major, Hob. XIV/5, L.28, also called a divertimento, [1] is a (formerly lost) sonata written c.1765–1771 [2] by Joseph Haydn. However, Anthony van Hoboken's catalogue states the composition date as "before 1766". [1] It may have been written for 2 violins and cello. [1]
Fragments of the sonata were discovered in a private collection and were subsequently sold at auction in 1961. [3] The fragments are now in the possession of the Preussiche Staatsbibliothek. [3] Later that year Charles Spinks gave the first contemporary performance of part of this sonata as part of a broadcast on Haydn piano sonatas for the BBC. [3] The text of this broadcast can be found in H. C. Robbins Landon’s, Essays on Eighteenth-Century Music (1969). [3]
The sonata was reconstructed by Christa Landon (H.C. Robbins Landon's first wife) and Karl Heinz Füssl. It was subsequently published in a Wiener Urtext edition (UT 50027) [4] under Hob. XVI/5a Add.
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The Piano Sonata in D major, Hob. XIV/5, L.28, also called a divertimento, [1] is a (formerly lost) sonata written c.1765–1771 [2] by Joseph Haydn. However, Anthony van Hoboken's catalogue states the composition date as "before 1766". [1] It may have been written for 2 violins and cello. [1]
Fragments of the sonata were discovered in a private collection and were subsequently sold at auction in 1961. [3] The fragments are now in the possession of the Preussiche Staatsbibliothek. [3] Later that year Charles Spinks gave the first contemporary performance of part of this sonata as part of a broadcast on Haydn piano sonatas for the BBC. [3] The text of this broadcast can be found in H. C. Robbins Landon’s, Essays on Eighteenth-Century Music (1969). [3]
The sonata was reconstructed by Christa Landon (H.C. Robbins Landon's first wife) and Karl Heinz Füssl. It was subsequently published in a Wiener Urtext edition (UT 50027) [4] under Hob. XVI/5a Add.
{{
cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location (
link)