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Chopin music book
Chopin music book






The four Ballades and the Sonatas in B-flat minor and B minor are among his greatest creations, combining passionate drama and lyrical tenderness in a memorable way. Chopin also achieved success in larger forms, including the scherzo, a form he reinvented the ballade, a genre he invented and the sonata. In these works, especially the nocturnes, preludes and mazurkas, the emotions are fleeting, and precious because of that. These include 20 nocturnes, 25 preludes, 17 waltzes, 15 polonaises, 58 mazurkas and 27 etudes. The majority of his solo pieces are in shorter forms, and improvisatory by nature. He composed virtually nothing in the final year of his life.Ĭhopin was the first composer of genius to devote himself uniquely to the piano - every one of his works was written for it either as solo instrument or in combination with other instruments. By then, Chopin was gravely ill seeking escape, he left Paris in April 1848 for an extended sojourn in England and Scotland, from which he returned, exhausted, in November. The situation with George Sand began to deteriorate in 1843, and in 1847 the break came. The opening movement of the sonata finds Chopin at the summit of inspiration, weaving turbulence and romantic yearning into a beautifully seamless expression. 56 Mazurkas - are characterized by remarkable refinement and complexity, along with a newly rich sense of ambivalence. The best of these works - the B minor Sonata, the Op. 48, 55 and 62, and the Sonata in B minor, Op. 50, 56, 59, 63 and 67, the A-flat major Polonaise, Op. During the 1840s, in spite of emotional ups and downs and recurrent illness, he produced a remarkable body of compositions that included the Ballades in A-flat, Op. Chopin endured his first major bout of tuberculosis, but though seriously ill managed to complete the 24 Preludes, Op. They spent the winter of 1838-39 together on Majorca, living in adjacent rooms in an abandoned Carthusian monastery. Some of his greatest works emerged as a result of the emotional contentment he felt in the early days of their nine-year liaison. In 1836, Chopin became engaged to Maria Wodzinski, but the engagement was broken off by her family the following year.Ĭhopin's art reached a new plateau in the late 1830s as a result of his involvement with the writer Aurore Dudevant, six years his senior, who in 1832 had taken to calling herself George Sand. 31 (1837), the Sonata in B-flat minor, Op. 25 (1835-37), dedicated to Liszt's mistress, the Comtesse Marie d'Agoult, the Scherzo in B-flat minor, Op. Chopin's works from his first years in Paris include the Nocturnes of Opp. He found himself in such demand as a teacher that he was able to make a comfortable living, and he hobnobbed with the great artists of the day, forming particularly close friendships with Eugene Delacroix, who would paint a splendid portrait of him in 1838, and Liszt. 26, 1832, with Franz Liszt, Felix Mendelssohn and Luigi Cherubini among those in the audience, Chopin, three days shy of his 22nd birthday, took his place as one of the celebrities of the French capital. After a sensational debut at the Salle Pleyel on Feb. He would never again return to his native country, but Poland's loss would be Paris' gain.īy the 1830s, Paris had become the undisputed center of European culture - a hotbed of new thinking in the arts and letters and the focal point of Romanticism in music. Seeking to expand his horizons, he left Poland for Vienna in November 1830, and after eight months there, headed for Paris. 2, for piano and orchestra on Mozart's "La ci darem la mano" - written when he was 17 - were published in 1830, prompting Robert Schumann's famous accolade in the Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung: "Hats off, gentlemen! A genius!" In the spring and autumn of 1830, Chopin treated the Warsaw audience to a pair of newly composed, marvelously poetic piano concertos. His name became known outside of Poland when his Variations, Op. Young Frederic studied piano with Wojciech Zywny and harmony and counterpoint with Jozef Elsner, gave his first concert when he was 8, and rather quickly outdistanced his teachers. No one before or since has contributed as many significant works to the piano's repertoire, or come closer to capturing its soul.Ĭhopin's mother was Polish, his father a Frenchman who had come to Poland as a young man and held jobs as a bookkeeper and tutor before marrying and settling in Warsaw. As a pianist, his talents were beyond emulation and had an impact on other musicians entirely out of proportion to the number of concerts he gave - only 30 public performances in 30 years of concertizing. Paris, October 17, 1849)įrederic Chopin was a Polish-born pianist and composer of matchless genius in the realm of keyboard music.








Chopin music book