Grande Sonate
Ludwig Schuncke’s Grande Sonate in G minor, Op. 3, is an ambitious early Romantic piano sonata written by a composer who died before the age of twenty-four. Composed in 1832 and published in 1834, the work brings together classical formal discipline, Romantic intensity, and a highly idiomatic command of the piano. This Felix Editions publication presents the sonata in a newly prepared urtext edition for practical use by advanced pianists.
About this edition
This edition is based on historical sources: the first edition published by Julius Wunder in 1834 and the sonata’s earlier appearance in the Pfennig-Magazin für Pianoforte-Spieler. The score has been newly engraved, with attention to clarity, spacing, and practical use at the instrument.
The edition is intended as a working score, not a scan or facsimile reprint. It offers a readable modern presentation of a substantial Romantic sonata whose original sources are not always convenient for performers, teachers, or students to use directly. The publication also includes introductory material placing Schuncke, his circle, and the sonata itself in historical context.
The music
The Grande Sonate consists of four movements and is unified by a simple three-note motif that recurs throughout the work. The first movement combines dramatic sonata writing with fugal elements and a carefully shaped sense of tension. The scherzo is brief, sharp-edged, and rhythmically unsettled, while the slow movement offers a lyrical and more intimate contrast.
The finale returns to a brilliant, energetic idiom, with virtuosic figuration and a broad rhetorical close. The sonata asks for more than technical display: rapid arpeggios, wide leaps, octave writing, repeated notes, contrapuntal passages, and lyrical voicing all need to be handled with control. At the same time, the music benefits from transparency, flexible phrasing, and a restrained approach to pedal and sonority.
Schuncke’s sonata belongs to the musical world of the early 1830s, close to Robert Schumann’s Leipzig circle yet still grounded in classical models. It is especially interesting for pianists who want to explore the Romantic sonata beyond the small group of works that dominate modern programming.
Who is it for?
This edition is suitable for advanced pianists looking for a substantial early Romantic sonata with both technical and interpretative demands. It will also be useful to teachers and conservatoire students interested in repertoire around Schumann, Mendelssohn, Chopin, and the post-Classical sonata tradition.
For recital planning, the work offers a serious alternative to more familiar Romantic sonatas without relying on novelty alone. For collectors and repertoire researchers, it provides practical access to a score that helps illuminate the wider piano culture of the 1830s.
Available formats
This publication is available as a Felix Editions score for piano solo. PDF download and printed edition details may be added where available.