Jonathan Biss's Online Course 'Exploring Beethoven's Piano Sonatas' Continues On Coursera, September 30

By: Sep. 16, 2019
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Jonathan Biss's Online Course 'Exploring Beethoven's Piano Sonatas' Continues On Coursera, September 30

Having attracted more than 150,000 students from nearly every country in the world since its launch in 2013, pianist Jonathan Biss's free online course Exploring Beethoven's Piano Sonatas continues its six-part survey of these 32 landmark works via online learning platform Coursera, with the next set of lectures-Part 5-scheduled to appear on Monday, September 30. Two lectures are devoted to the monumental "Hammerklavier" Sonata-No. 29 in B-flat major, Op. 106-while another two focus on Piano Sonatas No. 13 in E-flat major, Op. 27, No. 1 ("Quasi una fantasia") and No. 16 in G major, Op. 31, No. 1, respectively. With the sixth and final course module to be released on January 6, Mr. Biss will have completed his journey through the complete Beethoven piano sonatas.

Exploring Beethoven's Piano Sonatas is one of many avenues through which Mr. Biss has engaged with and shared Beethoven's music over the past ten years-for him a period of prolonged meditation on the composer's work. He completes the course and brings his decade of Beethoven to its culmination this season amidst the worldwide celebrations of Beethoven's 250th birthday. The course is offered in partnership with the Curtis Institute of Music, where Mr. Biss has been on faculty since 2011 and holds the Neubauer Family Chair in Piano Studies. Current and future lectures may be accessed via Coursera.org/Curtis.

The course provides an in-depth look at Beethoven's piano sonatas, featuring both analysis and historical background. Its video lessons take the perspective of the performer, exploring and demystifying the work of the pianist, while embracing the mystery of Beethoven's music itself.

Each lecture focuses on one sonata and an aspect of Beethoven's music that it exemplifies. This might include the relationship between Beethoven the pianist and Beethoven the composer, the critical role that improvisation plays in Beethoven's highly structured music, Beethoven's mixing of extremely refined music with rougher elements, and the often surprising ways in which the events of Beethoven's life influenced his compositional process and the character of the music that he was writing.

Speaking to the BBC one year after the launch of Part 1, which had attracted more than 35,000 students by that time, Mr. Biss said:

"My dream student was someone who has heard the music and been in some way turned on by it, but who has never had the opportunity to delve any deeper. ... I expected maybe 500 people to sign up. This was such a new venture for me, for Curtis, and for Coursera, which has never partnered with a music conservatory. We had no idea what was going to happen. So I have been absolutely floored."

In addition to exploring Beethoven's piano sonatas in the digital classroom, Mr. Biss has been recording a complete cycle of these works since 2011, with the ninth and final volume also scheduled for release in November 2019 by Orchid Classics. Both of these projects are complemented this season by Mr. Biss's performances of all 32 sonatas over seven recitals each at Berkeley's Hertz Hall, London's Wigmore Hall, and the McKnight Center for the Performing Arts at Oklahoma State University. He also performs sonata recitals and mini-cycles around the U.S. this season, including at the 92nd Street Y in New York, Perelman Theater in Philadelphia, Meany Hall in Seattle, and The Phillips Collection in Washington, DC, as well as abroad in Budapest, Melbourne, Rome, and Sydney.

Recent and upcoming Beethoven projects also include this season's performances of the "Emperor" Concerto with Osmo Vänskä and Curtis Symphony Orchestra at Carnegie Hall and beyond as part of a seven-city tour; Mr. Biss's Kindle Single e-books Beethoven's Shadow (2011) and Coda (2017); and the world premiere of a new Beethoven-inspired piano concerto by Brett Dean with The Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra-the final work to be written for the Beethoven/5 commissioning project, which has also included piano concertos by Timo Andres, Sally Beamish, Salvatore Sciarrino, and Caroline Shaw.

Jonathan Biss is a world-renowned pianist who channels his deep musical curiosity into performances and projects in the concert hall and beyond. In addition to performing with today's leading orchestras, he continues to expand his reputation as a teacher, musical thinker, and one of the great Beethoven interpreters of our time. He recently joined Mitsuko Uchida as Co-Artistic Director of the Marlboro Music Festival, where he has spent thirteen summers. He has written extensively about the music he plays, and has authored three e-books, including the first Kindle Single written by a classical musician (Beethoven's Shadow).

Mr. Biss's projects, including his decade-long Beethoven immersion, represent his complete approach to music-making and connecting his audience to his own passion for the music. Previous projects have included an exploration of composers' "Late Style" in various concert programs at Carnegie Hall, the Barbican Centre, Philadelphia Chamber Music Society, and San Francisco Performances. He also published the Kindle Single Coda on the topic. Schumann: Under the Influence was a 30-concert exploration of the composer's role in musical history, for which Mr. Biss also recorded Schumann and Dvořák piano quintets with the Elias String Quartet and wrote A Pianist Under the Influence.

Mr. Biss represents the third generation in a family of professional musicians that includes his grandmother Raya Garbousova, one of the first well-known female cellists (for whom Samuel Barber composed his Cello Concerto), and his parents, violinist Miriam Fried and violist/violinist Paul Biss. Growing up surrounded by music, Mr. Biss began his piano studies at age six, and his first musical collaborations were with his mother and father. He studied with Evelyne Brancart at Indiana University and with Leon Fleisher at the Curtis Institute of Music. He has since appeared with major orchestras around the world, including in the U.S. with the Los Angeles and New York Philharmonics; the Boston, Chicago, and San Francisco Symphonies; and the Cleveland and Philadelphia Orchestras. He has also been recognized with numerous honors, including Lincoln Center's Martin E. Segal Award, an Avery Fisher Career Grant, the 2003 Borletti-Buitoni Trust Award, and the 2002 Gilmore Young Artist Award.

For more information, visit jonathanbiss.com.



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