Moderator: Nicole Marie
<P>The heck with Chopin, probably Choppin Broccoli, Choppin Broccoli<P>The real question is...what would King do?<P>"I need a drink...water, straight up."
<P>Ben, I too am a BIG fan of Chopin; he is my favourite Polish woodcutter. Must say though, I don't rate his concertos that highly. I love his op.10 etudes. They are murderously difficult to play, as are the op.25 set. His ballades, scherzi & impromptus are fabulous (the G minor ballade is real girl's-heart-melting stuff). The polonaises are awesome, the waltzes delightful, & yes, the 2nd & 3rd sonatas are mind-blowing. Do you know his cello sonata, op.65? Very under-valued.
<P>I'm surprised you don't like his concertos. Why not? I too like a lot of his etudes, preludes, ballades and so forth, but I'm not expert on his music enough to remember them all. I have heard they can be devilishly difficult--just like some of Franz Liszt's stuff. I have learned three chords on my keyboard now...'G' 'C' and 'F.' I guess I'm a ways off from tackling a polonaise, huh? I haven't heard his cello concerto but I will add it to my 'want' list. I have an Artur Rubinstein Chopin collection--Chopin was his favorite composer, I think and his playing shows it.<P>Regards,<BR>BenG
<P>Ben,<P>Chopin was not a great orchestral composer, & the orchestra sounds to me to be superfluous in the two concertos. All the great invention is in the solo writing. Have you heard the solo piano versions of these works? They are much more satisfying. Next to Beethoven, I think Chopin's piano oeuvre is the greatest we have. Which Rubinstein set do you have? He recorded 3 Chopin collections for RCA - I have his 12-LP set from 1973. Yes, he adored this composer.<P>You should be able to double your keyboard chords quite easily by making Am, Dm & Em your next targets. Like with C, F & G, the finger spacing is identical! 
Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot]