For solo piano

Ludwig’s Nightmare

Ludwigs Alptraum

A seven-minute solo piano work written for the Second International Beethoven Competition for Piano Bonn.

Year 2007
Duration 7′
Scoring Solo
Piano
Publisher Boosey & Hawkes
/ Sikorski

Commission

Commissioned by Deutsche Telekom. For the Second International Beethoven Competition for Piano Bonn 2007.

Premiere

11 December 2007. Bonn.

Competition Context

Presented by six competitors in the semifinal. The competition was under the patronage of German President Horst Köhler.

Form

  • Ludwig’s Nightmare

    One-movement work for solo piano.

  • Duration

    Approximately 7 minutes.

  • Departure Point

    Beethoven’s Sonata in E-flat major.

Work Information

English Title
Ludwig’s Nightmare
German Title
Ludwigs Alptraum.
Scoring
For solo piano.
Year
2007
Duration
7′
Form
One movement.
Instrumentation
Commission
Commissioned by Deutsche Telekom for the Second International Beethoven Competition for Piano Bonn 2007.
Premiere
11 December 2007 · Bonn.
Competition
Presented by six competitors during the semifinal of the Second International Beethoven Competition for Piano Bonn.
Publisher
Score
SIK 8559.
Format
12 pages.
Availability
Score available for purchase through Boosey & Hawkes / Sikorski.

The Work

Ludwig’s Nightmare, originally titled Ludwigs Alptraum, is a short solo piano work written in 2007 for the Second International Beethoven Competition for Piano Bonn. It takes Beethoven not as a monument, but as a dream-presence: heavy, human, awkward, struggling toward an impossible grace.

Auerbach’s own note describes the title as emerging after she rejected a more conventional formal description. The final title turns the piece into a psychological theatre, where fragments, impulses and distorted recognitions belong together as they do in dreams.

“The most disjointed elements suddenly reveal connections and seem to belong together in a strange and distorted reality.” Lera Auerbach
  • Form One movement.
  • Duration Approximately 7 minutes.
  • Forces Solo piano.

Context

The piece was created for a Beethoven competition, and its title makes that context central. Rather than offering an homage in the conventional sense, the work imagines Beethoven through dream-logic: symbols, distortions, fragments and the hidden threads connecting one day to the next.

Pianist Yael Weiss describes the work as using the opening measures of Beethoven’s Sonata in E-flat major as a departure point. The piece therefore becomes not an arrangement or paraphrase, but a nightmare-refraction of Beethovenian memory.

A Beethoven competition piece that refuses monumentality: a compact nightmare of inheritance, distortion and memory.

Online Materials

Public links related to Ludwig’s Nightmare. Recordings and streaming links are grouped here only; the main work information above remains limited to the work itself.

Publisher and Materials

Published by Boosey & Hawkes / Sikorski. The score is available through the official Boosey & Hawkes / Sikorski purchase page. Rental material has been intentionally omitted because this is a solo piano work available for purchase.