Scriabin’s ten complete piano sonatas offer a fascinating insight into the Russian composer’s stylistic development. While his first works still fully reflect the late-romantic tradition, the late works keep bursting the bounds of tonality. The boldly outlined, two-movement Fourth Sonata marks a turning point, for it evokes the world of the “Poème de l’extase” with its mystical atmosphere hovering between ethereal rapture and ecstatic flight. The publication of opus 30 means that all of Scriabin’s sonatas are now available in Henle Urtext quality and edited by the expert Valentina Rubcova of Moscow – an invitation to all pianists to plunge into this unique cosmos.
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Preface
The 4th Piano Sonata op. 30 in Fk major marks a turning point in the sonata output of Alexander N. Scriabin (1872 – 1915). While his first three sonatas still belong to the late-Romantic style of his earlier years, with his Sonata no. 4 Scriabin sets off into a new, mystical sound world that one generally associates with his orchestral Poème de l’extase op. 54 of … more
Critical Commentary
About the composer

Alexander Skrjabin
Russian composer and pianist. The focal point of his oeuvre is his extremely unique piano music; in addition, he wrote important orchestral works.
1872 | Born in Moscow on January 6, the son of a pianist (his mother); she died in 1872. |
1888–92 | Piano studies at the Moscow Conservatory |
1888–96 | Twenty-four Preludes, Op. 11, containing all the hallmarks of Scriabin’s early period: broad, ornamental cantilenas underpinned by figurations and arpeggios in the style of Chopin, complex rhythmic structure from polyrhythms and syncopations. |
1892–1913 | Composition of ten piano sonatas. |
1896 | Travels to Paris, Vienna, Rome. |
1897 | Piano Concerto in F-sharp minor, Op. 20, in the style of Chopin. |
1897–1909/10 | He primarily composes orchestral pieces, including the major works “Le Poème de l’extase” (“The Poem of Ecstasy”) for large orchestra (1905–07), Op. 54, and “Prométhée ou Le Poème du feu” (“Prometheus or The Poem of Fire,” 1908–10); orientation toward Liszt and Wagner; programmatic music with occasional annotations in the musical score, incorporation of philosophical notions into his compositions, which are defined by various philosophical movements from around the turn of the century. Unusual intervals, harmonically at the edge of tonality. |
1899–1904 | Composition of his three symphonies, Opp. 26, 29, and 43. |
1904 | He resides in Switzerland. |
1906 | Invitation to the United States. |
1910 | Return to Russia. |
1908–10 | “Prométhée ou Le Poème du feu” for piano, orchestra, organ, choir, and clavier à lumière, Op. 60: enrichment of musical performance through plays of light. 1911–14, piano compositions, Opp. 61–74, with avant-garde harmonies. |
1913 | Beginning of the multisensory “Acte préalable” (“Prefatory Action”), which is never completed. |
1915 | Death in Moscow on April 27. |