The Classical Music Book

(Tuis.) #1

164


W


hile Chopin was one of
the supreme composers
of the early Romantic
period, he was in some respects
untypical of the age he has come
to embody. Unlike fellow musicians
Robert Schumann and Franz
Liszt, Chopin had little interest in
using music to express narratives
inspired by Romantic art and
literature, or in producing grandiose
works with huge orchestras in
the manner of Hector Berlioz.
Instead, Chopin perfected his art
within circumscribed confines,
tending toward brevity and the

evocation of moods. Every one
of his compositions includes the
piano, and the vast majority are
for piano alone, yet within this
precisely defined area the breadth
of his musical thought is vast.
Chopin created an unparalleled
intensity of melody, harmony, and
expression. Writing in a style that
seemed to represent the soul of

Chopin plays for Prince Radziwiłł
during a trip to Berlin, in 1829. The
same year, he composed the Polonaise
brillante for the prince (a cellist) and his
daughter (a pianist) to practice.

IN CONTEXT


FOCUS
Solo piano music

BEFORE
1812 John Field, an Irish
composer based in
St. Petersburg, publishes
the first Romantic piano piece
to be called a “nocturne.”

1833 In Paris, Chopin’s
Nocturnes, Op. 9, are the
composer’s first nocturnes
to be published.

1834–1835 Robert Schumann
composes Carnaval, a collection
of 21 piano movements, one of
which is titled Chopin.

AFTER
1892–1893 Brahms publishes
four collections of small piano
pieces, including intermezzos,
fantasias, and capriccios.

1910–1913 Debussy, who
described Chopin as “the
greatest of us all,” writes his
two books of Préludes.

SIMPLICITY


IS THE FINAL


ACHIEVEMENT


PRÉLUDES (1839), FRÉDÉRIC CHOPIN


US_164-165_Chopin.indd 164 26/03/18 1:01 PM

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