I always thought of sforzando as an accent reinforced by a sudden loud dynamic. And every definition I can find in the internets seems to agree with that assumption. But lately (as in just the other day) I have started to think of the marking as having more to do with phrasing and phrase direction than dynamics or even accent.
I have been observing the behavior of the sforzando in Beethoven violin sonatas lately, and in Beethoven (where he indicates them as "sf" without the "z") they really seem to function as a kind of a springboard to help organize the music horizontally into phrases.
Here are a couple of indications of how they behave in their habitat (Beethoven Violin Sonata Opus 23):
Tuesday, December 07, 2021
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The sf is often used where a composer today might rebar the music. In the example, the “downbeat” is displaced by the sf to the middle of the bar.
Sf was often used, in other places, simply to mean “this is louder” until canceled by a p. Lots of this in Mozart and Haydn, but definitely still operative in Mendelssohn “Reformation” Symphony movt 2.
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