Sixteen Waltzes, Op. 39 (Brahms) Explained

Sixteen Waltzes
Type:Piano music
Composer:Johannes Brahms
Image Upright:0.8
Native Name:Sechzehn Walzer
Opus:39
Dedication:Eduard Hanslick

Sixteen Waltzes (German; Sechzehn Walzer), Op. 39, is a set of 16 short waltzes for piano written by Johannes Brahms. They were composed in 1865, and published in 1866, dedicated to the music critic Eduard Hanslick.[1]

Background

These waltzes were written for piano four hands, and were also arranged for piano solo by the composer, in two different versions – difficult and simplified. The three versions were published at the same time, and sold well, contrary to the composer's expectations.

The waltzes were written while the composer lived in Vienna, a city where he would permanently settle in 1872.[2] They were intended as a tribute to the waltz dance form which had become especially fashionable in his adopted city.

Characteristics

In the solo versions, some of the keys were altered from the original duet version (the last four in the difficult version and No. 6 in the easy version). Waltz Number 15 in A major (or A) has acquired a life of its own, as likely the most popular piece in the collection. An arrangement of five of the waltzes (Nos. 1, 2, 11, 14, and 15) for two pianos, four hands was published after the composer's death.

Almost all of the waltzes are in a recapitulating binary form. For each waltz, the first half moves to the dominant, the relative major, or a substitute key. Then, the second half begins with a developmental passage that leads back to the main theme and the tonic.

In 1984, critic Edward Rothstein said that Joseph Smith "made a compelling case for taking them seriously as a unified cycle."[3]

Waltzes

The 16 waltzes listed here are played by Martha Goldstein:

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Palmer, John. "Waltzes for piano, four hands, Op. 39 (1865)" in All Music Guide to Classical Music: The Definitive Guide to Classical Music, p. 201 (Chris Woodstra, Gerald Brennan, and Allen Schrott eds., Backbeat Books, 2005, . Also available at
  2. Todd, R. Larry. Nineteenth-Century Piano Music, p. 372 (Routledge, 2013)
  3. Edward Rothstein, "Music: Joseph Smith", The New York Times, March 29, 1984, p. C28