The Classical Music Book

(Tuis.) #1
165
See also: Pièces de clavecin 82–83 ■ Die schöne Müllerin 150 –155 ■
Prélude à l’après-midi d’un faune 228–231 ■ Ravel’s Piano Concerto in D for
the left hand 266–267

ROMANTIC 1810 –1920


the instrument itself, Chopin had a
profound effect on piano technique
and helped push the instrument
to the forefront of 19th-century
music. Preferring to compose in
miniature rather than on a large
scale, he produced three four-
movement piano sonatas and many
short “character” pieces, especially
preludes, nocturnes, études, and
dances, such as the mazurka,
polonaise, and waltz.

Mood and style
Between 1835 and 1839, Chopin
composed a set of 24 preludes—
one in each of the major and minor
keys—using J.S. Bach’s Preludes
from the Well-Tempered Clavier
(1722) as his model. For Chopin, the
prelude was essentially an abstract
form, although some of his pieces
were prescribed titles by his
publishers that suggested specific
influences. The “Raindrop” Prelude,
for example, earned its (inauthentic)
nickname from the French novelist
George Sand’s account of incessant

rain at Valldemossa, on the island
of Majorca, where she and Chopin,
who was then her lover, spent the
winter of 1838–1839 together.

Polish dance
Chopin’s interest in dance was
partly a conscious homage to his
Polish heritage. The polonaise
(meaning “Polish” in French)
was used by many composers
across Europe, and Chopin wrote
more than a dozen examples,
his first when he was just seven
years old. Like the polonaise,
the mazurka was a traditional
dance form to which Chopin
returned regularly on no fewer
than 50 occasions.
Chopin mainly used the waltz
dance form for lighter salon music.
The so-called “Minute Waltz”
and the Waltz in E-flat, Op. 18
(Grande valse brillante) are rapid
pieces. In contrast to the showy
waltzes, Chopin’s 20 nocturnes
are predominantly intimate and
introverted in mood, slow and
dreamy, as their title suggests.
The nocturnes enjoy an enduring
legacy as some of the most popular
solo works ever written for piano.
The term “nocturne” and its style
were the invention of the Irish
composer and celebrated pianist
John Field, whose work Chopin
knew and admired.
Like Field, Chopin was a
virtuoso pianist, and his interest
in the extension of piano technique
is demonstrated in his 27 études
(“studies”), which he began writing
in his teens. In these pieces, Chopin
managed to combine technical
advances with great expressive
and musical quality. They have
remained both a challenge and
a joy to pianists ever since. ■

Frédéric Chopin


Born near Warsaw in 1810,
Chopin studied the piano
in the Polish capital and
performed at musical soirées
in its greatest houses. He
visited Paris at the age of 20
and settled there, making a
living by teaching, publishing
his music, and appearing at
salons. Chopin disliked
concerts, and performed in
few, yet his influence was
huge, founded on works that
embraced the folk music of his
native land, as well as other,
more conceptual forms that
lifted piano technique to new
levels. Initially composing in
a style that favored virtuosity
in the tradition of composers
Johann Nepomuk Hummel,
Friedrich Kalkbrenner, and
Carl Maria von Weber, he later
absorbed within his piano
textures the influence of Bach.
His most durable personal
relationship, with the novelist
George Sand, ended in 1847.
He died of tuberculosis two
years later in Paris.

Other key works

1830 Piano Concerto No. 1
1835 Ballade No. 1 in G minor
1844 Sonata No. 3 in B minor
1846 Barcarolle in F-sharp

Preludes, nocturnes,
and études

Short introductory
movement often
preceding a
larger piece.

Expressive and
tranquil compositions
inspired by the night,
following no set form.

Pieces designed for
practice, to perfect
musical skills.

Preludes

Nocturnes

Études

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