Bagatelle in A major, Op. 119 No. 4

by Ludwig van Beethoven

Classical Bagatelle Advanced
Key A major
Tempo Andante cantabile
Composed 1820–1822
Published 1823
Duration 4 min

Instrumentation

Piano

Collections

Musical Terms (4)

  • attacca subito Italian
    Proceed immediately to the next movement without any pause — Beethoven's characteristic instruction linking movements into a continuous arc.
    One of Beethoven's most striking structural devices. The emotional momentum built at the end of one movement is deliberately not allowed to dissipate; the next movement inherits and transforms it.
  • con moto Italian
    With motion — in Beethoven, indicating a flowing, forward-driven quality that prevents andante or adagio from becoming too slow.
    Beethoven's 'Andante con moto' (e.g., the 5th Symphony slow movement, the Ghost Trio, Op. 27 No. 1 second movement) implies a purposeful walking pace — never static. The motion is internal as well as metric.
  • Empfindung German
    Feeling, sensation — Beethoven's own word for the emotional directness he sought in his slow movements.
    Beethoven occasionally added verbal descriptions to his scores (the Op. 135 finale: 'Muss es sein?'). These reflect his belief that music should communicate feeling directly, not through style or convention.
  • sempre Italian
    Always, continuously — typically qualifying a dynamic or expression mark to indicate it should be maintained throughout.
    Beethoven's 'sempre pp' or 'sempre staccato' instructions require the quality to be held unchanged for extended passages. Avoid the natural tendency to vary; the instruction's point is the sustained quality.

Practice Bagatelle in A major, Op. 119 No. 4

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