|
See also: Polish musical composer and pianist, was See also: born at Zelazowa-Wola, near Warsaw, on the 22nd of See also: February 1810 (not the 1st of See also: March 1809)
.
His
See also: father, of French origin, born at See also: Nancy in 1770, had married a Polish lady, Justine Krzyzanowska
.
See also: Frederic was their third See also: child
.
His first musical See also: education he received from Adalbert Ziwny, a See also: Czech musician, who is said to have been a passionate admirer of J
.
S
.
Bach
.
He also received a See also: good general education at one of the first colleges of Warsaw, where he was supported by See also: Prince See also: Antoine Radziwill, a generous See also: protector of See also: artistic talent and himself well known as the composer of See also: music to Goethe's See also: Faust and other See also: works
.
His musical See also: genius opened to Chopin the best circles of Polish society, at that See also: time unrivalled in See also: Europe for its ease of intercourse, the beauty and See also: grace of its See also: women, and its liberal appreciation of artistic gifts
.
These early impressions were of lasting influence on Chopin's development
.
While at See also: college he received thorough instruction in the theory of his See also: art from See also: Joseph Elsner, a learned musician and director of the conservatoire at Warsaw
.
When in 1829 he See also: left his native See also: town for Vienna, where his debut as a pianist took place, he was in all respects a perfectly formed and See also: developed artist
.
There is in his compositions little of that gradual progress which, for instance, in See also: Beethoven necessitates a See also: classification of his works according to different periods
.
Chopin's individuality and his See also: style were distinctly pronounced in that set of variations on " La ci darem " which excited the wondering enthusiasn of Robert Schumann
.
In 1831 he left Vienna with the intention of visiting See also: London; but on his way to See also: England he reached See also: Paris and settled there for the rest of his See also: life
.
Here again he soon became the favourite and musical See also: hero of society
.
His connexion with Madame Dudevant, better known by her See also: literary pseudonym of See also: George See also: Sand (q.v.), is an important feature of Chopin's life
.
When in 1839 his See also: health began to fail, George Sand went with him to See also: Majorca, and it was mainly owing to her See also: tender care that the composer recovered his health for a time
.
Chopin declared that the destruction of his relations with Madame Dudevant in 1847 broke up his life
.
The association of these two artists has provoked a whole literature on the nature of their relations, of which the novelist's Un Hiver d Majorque was the beginning
.
The last ten years of Chopin's life were a continual struggle with the pulmonary disease to which he succumbed in Paris on the 17th of See also: October 1849
.
The See also: year before his See also: death he visited England, where he was received with See also: enthusiasm by his numerous admirers
.
Chopin died in the arms of his See also: sister, who hastened from Poland to his death-See also: bed
.
He was buried in the cemetery of Pere Lachaise
.
A small monument was erected to the memory of the composer at Wasswan in 1880
.
Portraits and medallions of Chopin were executed by Ary See also: Scheffer and See also: Eugene Delacroix, and by the sculptors Bary and Clesinger
.
A distinguished See also: English See also: amateur thus records his impressions of Chopin's style of pianoforte-playing compared with those of other masters
.
" His technical characteristics may be broadly indicated as negation of bravura, absolute perfection of See also: finger-See also: play, and of the legatissimo touch, on which no other pianist has ever so entirely leant, to the exclusion of that high See also: relief and point which the See also: modern See also: German school, after the examples of See also: Liszt and See also: Thalberg, has so effectively developed It is in these feature that we must recognize that Grundverschiedenheit (fundamental difference) which according to Mendelssohn distinguished Chopin's playing from that of these masters, and in no less degree from the example and teaching of See also: Moscheles
.
.
.
. Imagine a delicate See also: man of extreme refinement of mien and manner, sitting at the piano and playing with no sway of the See also: body and scarcely any See also: movement of the arms, depending entirely upon his narrow feminine hands and slender fingers
.
The wide arpeggios in the left See also: hand, maintained in a continuous stream of See also: tone by the strict legato and See also: fine and See also: constant use of the damper-pedal, formed an harmonious substructure for a wonderfully poetic cantabile
.
His delicate pianissimo, the ever-changing modifications of tone and time (tempo rubato) were of indescribable effect
.
Even inenergetic passages he scarcely ever exceeded an ordinary mezzo-forte
.
His playing as a whole was unique in its kind, and no traditions of it can remain, for there is no school of Chopin the pianist, for the obvious reason that he could never be regarded as a public player, and his best pupils were nearly all amateurs."
In looking through the See also: list of his compositions, teeming with mazurkas, valses, polonaises, and other forms of See also: national dance music, one could hardly suppose that here one of the most melancholy natures has revealed itself
.
This seeming paradox is solved by the type of Chopin's See also: nationality, of which it has justly been said that its very dances are sadness intensified
.
But not-withstanding this strongly pronounced national type of his compositions, his music is always expressive of his individual feelings and sufferings to a degree rarely met with in the See also: annals of the art
.
He is indeed the lyrical composer See also: par excellence of the modern school, and the intensity of his expression finds its equal in literature only in the songs of Heinrich See also: Heine, to whom Chopin has been justly compared
.
A sensation of such high-strung passion cannot be prolonged . Hence we see that the shorter forms of music, the etude, the nocturne, besides the national dances already alluded to, are chosen by Chopin in preference . Even when he treats the larger forms of the concerto or theSee also: sonata this concentrated, not to say pointed, character of Chopin's style becomes obvious
.
The more extended dimensions seem to encumber the freedom of his movements
.
The concerto for pianoforte with accompaniment of the orchestra in E may be instanced
.
Here the See also: adagio takes the See also: form of a See also: romance, and in the final See also: rondo the rhythm of a Polish dance becomes recognizable while the See also: instrumentation throughout is meagre and wanting in colour
.
Chopin is out of his See also: element, and even the beauty of his melodies and harmonies cannot wholly banish the impression of incongruity
.
Fortunately he himself knew the limits of his power, and with very few exceptions his works belong to that class of minor compositions of which he was an unrivalled master
.
Barring a collection of Polish songs, two concertos, and a very small number of concerted pieces of chamber music, almost all his works are written for the pianoforte See also: solo; the See also: symphony, the
See also: oratorio, the See also: opera, he never attempted
.
Chopin's works See also: group themselves firstly into the See also: period from Op. r to 22, which includes nearly all his attempts at large or classical forms, e.g. the works with orchestra, Op
.
2 (variations on La ci darem), Opp
.
11 and 14 (concertos), Op
.
13 (Polish fantasia), Op . 14 (Krakowiak, a concerto-rondo in mazurka-rhythm), and Op . 22 (Andante spianato andSee also: Polonaise), besides the solo rondos Opp
.
1, 5, 16, and the variations Op
.
12 and the essays in chamber music Opp
.
3, 8, 65
.
Meanwhile, however, the mature lyric style of his second period already began with Op
.
6 (4 mazurkas), and though it is not confined to small forms, the larger mature works (beginning with the See also: ballade Op
.
23 and excepting only the sonata Op
.
58 and the Allegro de Concert Op
.
46) are as See also: independent of tradition as the smallest
.
It is well to sift the See also: posthumous works from those published under Chopin's direction, for the last three mazurkas are the only things he did not keep back as misrepresenting him
.
On these principles his mature works are summed up in the 42 mazurkas (Opp . 6, 7, 17, 24, 30, 33, 41, 50, 56, 59, 63, and the beautiful contribution to the collection Notre temps) ; 7 polonaises (Opp . 26, 40, 53, 61); 24 preludes (in all the major and minor keys) Op . 28, and the single larger prelude Op . 45; 27 etudes (12 in Op . 10, 12 in Op . 25, and 3 written for the MethodeSee also: des methodes) ; 18 nocturnes (Opp
.
9, 15, 27, 32, 37, 48, 55, 62) ; 4 ballades, in forms of Chopin's own invention (Opp
.
23, 38, 47, 52) ; 4 scherzos (Opp
.
20, 31, 39, 54) 8 waltzes (Opp
.
18, 34, 42, 64) ; and several pieces of various description, notably the See also: great fantasia Op
.
49 and the impromptus Opp
.
29, 36, 51 . . The posthumous works number 35 pieces, besides a small See also: volume of songs a few of which are of great See also: interest
.
See also: Franz Liszt wrote a charming sketch of Chopin's life and art (F
.
Chopin, par F
.
Liszt, Paris, 1851), and a very appreciative though somewhat eccentric analysis of his See also: work appeared anonymously in 1842 (An Essay on the Works of Frederic Chopin, London)
.
The See also: standard biography is the English work of Professor F
.
Niecks (See also: Novello, 1888)
.
See also W
.
H
.
Hadow, Studies in Modern Music, second series (1908)
.
The See also: editions of Chopin's works by his pupil Mikuli and by Klindworth are full of valuable elucidation as to methods of performance, but unfortunately they do not distinguish the commentary from the text
.
The critical edition published by Breitkopf and Hartel, with all its mistakes, is absolutely necessary for students who wish to know what Chopin wished to put into the hands of players of independent See also: judgment
.
|
|
|
[back] CHONS |
[next] CHOPSTICKS |
Dear Sir/Madam I have just visited your excellent website and would like to offer one of my articles on Chopin interpretation to complement the essay about the composer. The article that is currently displayed on the 'Chopin page' of my website: www.angelalear.co.uk was originally published some years ago in 'Piano' magazine and is based on my extensive research into Chopin's autograph manuscripts and all available original source materials. My career as a professional pianist and freelance lecturer has almost exclusively been devoted to Chopin and I am in the process of writing a book on the interpretation of his music - in addition to completing my series of Chopin CD's. I would be very pleased to hear from you if you require any further details. Thank you. Yours faithfully Angela Lear www.angelalear.co.uk
To whom it may concern, My name is Aradhana Gupta. I realize that this message is not relavent here, but I am desperately trying to re-trace my roots, and any help I can get will be most deeply appreciated. I have written a memoir that awaits in the hands of an agent and it needs accuarte information. Since early childhood I have been told about my maternal family being related to Frederic Chopin. I have recently obtained an old, hand-written family tree that cleary shows Mary Chopin married to George Anthony John, my great-grandfather in Agra, India. However, as I trace the chart further into its roots, I find that it is not clear as to how Frederick Chopin was related to John Francis Chopin, and I am feverishly searching for this one link. Whether or not there is a family connection between Frederic and John Francis Chopin will either validate or rebuke what I have been told over the years. I am searching for the truth, since the future of my memoir depends on validity. I have gone to almost every web site possible to learn about their family linkage, but have not found anything. I hope and pray that you can help me in my search, or let me know where else to dig for this information. I eagerly look forward to hearing from you. Most sincerely, Aradhana Gupta
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.