→ rdfs:label → "PAUL LEWIS | SCHUBERT II"^^xsd:string
→ dcterms:description → "<p></p><p style="margin-bottom:1.5rem;padding:0px;vertical-align:baseline;font-size:16px;background:#ffffff;border:0px;color:#000000;font-family:'open sans', arial, sans-serif;"><span style="margin:0px;padding:0px;vertical-align:baseline;background:transparent;border:0px;font-weight:700;">Schubert</span><br />Piano sonata No 15 in C, D840 <em style="margin:0px;padding:0px;vertical-align:baseline;background:transparent;border:0px;">Reliquie</em><br />Piano sonata No 13 in A, D664<br />Piano sonata No 16 in A minor, D845</p><p style="margin-bottom:1.5rem;padding:0px;vertical-align:baseline;font-size:16px;background:#ffffff;border:0px;color:#000000;font-family:'open sans', arial, sans-serif;"><span style="margin:0px;padding:0px;vertical-align:baseline;background:transparent;border:0px;font-weight:700;">The second recital in <a%20href="https://www.paullewispiano.co.uk/"%20style="margin:0px;padding:0px;vertical-align:baseline;background:transparent;border:0px;color:#ff3366;">Paul Lewis</a>‘s Schubert sonata series features two works composed in Spring 1825.</span> Schubert completed and published the D845 sonata as the Premiere grande Sonate later that year, but he abandoned the D840 sonata part way through. The unfinished work in its incomplete form was published some 30 years after Schubert’s death. Tonight’s programme closes with the sonata the 22-year-old Schubert wrote whilst on holiday in the Austrian Alps. The carefree work reflects what Schubert scholar Brian Newbould has described as the composer’s ‘wide-eyed youthful contentment’.<br /></p><p><br /></p>"^^http://purl.org/xtypes/Fragment-XHTML
→ rdfs:label → "Turner Sims Concert Hall"^^xsd:string