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Context, Form and Style in Sterndale Bennett's Piano Concertos

Dibble, J.C.

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Abstract

A concert pianist in his own right and a prodigious youth, Sterndale Bennett composed his five complete piano concertos at the beginning of his career. Although Mozart is often cited as a major influence on Bennett’s musical style, and Bennett was a keen executant of Mozart’s piano concertos throughout his career as a virtuoso (at a time when a performing tradition of Mozart’s concertos was still establishing itself), of equal or even greater impact on Bennett’s style of concerto was the ‘London School’ of pianists, among them Field, Hummel, Potter (Bennett’s teacher), Cramer and Moscheles whose first-movement structural paradigms of ritornello and sonata are especially evident in the corresponding movements of the first four of Bennett’s concertos. Structural and stylistic factors are also discussed in relation to the more romantically inclined slow movements (which includes an examination of the programmatic movement of the Third Concerto in C minor Op. 9, so enthusiastically reviewed by Schumann in Leipzig, and the unpublished ‘Adagio in G minor’) as well as the ‘shared sonata’ schemes of the finales in which the influence of Mendelssohn features more conspicuously. Finally, the stylistic amalgam of Bennett’s concertos, in particular the frequently performed Fourth Concerto in F minor Op. 19 and the unpublished Konzert-Stück in A minor, is considered within the larger context of the first half of the nineteenth century with particular reference to the tensions that existed between the composer’s classical instincts and the desire to experiment with freer Romantic forms.

Citation

Dibble, J. (2016). Context, Form and Style in Sterndale Bennett's Piano Concertos. Nineteenth-Century Music Review, 13(2), 195-219. https://doi.org/10.1017/s1479409816000616

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Sep 1, 2016
Online Publication Date Dec 9, 2016
Publication Date Dec 9, 2016
Deposit Date Oct 24, 2016
Publicly Available Date Nov 2, 2016
Journal Nineteenth-Century Music Review
Print ISSN 1479-4098
Electronic ISSN 2044-8414
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 13
Issue 2
Pages 195-219
DOI https://doi.org/10.1017/s1479409816000616

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Copyright Statement
This article has been published in a revised form in Nineteenth-Century Music Review https://doi.org/10.1017/S1479409816000616. This version is free to view and download for private research and study only. Not for re-distribution, re-sale or use in derivative works. © Cambridge University Press 2016




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