BEETHOVEN PIANO SONATAS: APPASSIONATA
Tim Horton
Palace Theatre, Mansfield
Thursday 10 September 2026, 7.30pm
Tickets:
£16 Standard
£6.50 Under 35s
Tickets go on sale at 10.00am on 1 July
On the threshold of a Beethoven bicentenary year, celebrated pianist Tim Horton (Essemble 360, Leanore Trio) launches his latest marathon project at Mansfield Palace Theatre. With his familiar commitment, rigour and virtuosic playing, he embarks on the monumental feat of a complete Beethoven piano sonatas cycle.
This thrilling evening launches a journey through Beethoven’s staggering achievements for piano, with works including his celebrated Appassionata sonata.
BEETHOVEN
Piano Sonata No.1 in F minor Op.2
Piano Sonata No.3 in C Op.2
Piano Sonata No.2 in A Op.2
Piano Sonata No.23 in F minor Op.57 ‘Appassionata’
BEETHOVEN, LUDWIG VAN Piano Sonata Op.2 No.1-3
BEETHOVEN Ludwig van, Piano Sonata in F minor Op.57 ‘Appassionata’
The Sonata in F minor Op.57 only acquired its famous nickname ‘Appassionata’ after Beethoven’s death – an invention by a Hamburg publisher that has stuck. The work was mostly sketched in 1805, finished the following year, and first published in 1807. The manuscript, in the Bibliothèque Nationale de France, came from the family of the French pianist Marie Bigot, to whom Beethoven had given it after she sight-read it for him. Her husband recalled that just before Beethoven’s visit, during his journey back to Vienna from Silesia, he was ‘surprised by a storm and driving rain, which soaked through the case in which he carried the Sonata in F minor which he had just composed’ and, indeed, the manuscript has many water stains, presumably made by this downpour. The Appassionata is recognized as one of the greatest of Beethoven’s middle-period piano sonatas (alongside the Waldstein), and its turbulent emotional world moves from the gloom of the opening to a quotation from a folk song (for the second theme), a set of variations on a deceptively simple chordal theme for the slow movement, leading via a chromatic diminished seventh chord to the finale.
Nigel Simeone © 2011