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Скачать или смотреть Frederic Chopin - Polonaise in C-sharp Minor Op 26 No 1 | Library of Music

  • Library of Music
  • 2021-11-11
  • 1277
Frederic Chopin - Polonaise in C-sharp Minor Op 26 No 1 | Library of Music
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Описание к видео Frederic Chopin - Polonaise in C-sharp Minor Op 26 No 1 | Library of Music

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Polonaise in C-sharp Minor Op 26 No 1 by Frederic Chopin difficulty 7/10

Frederic Chopin Ballades    • Frederic Chopin - Ballades  
Frederic Chopin Sonatas    • Frederic Chopin - Piano Sonatas  

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The polonaise is a couple dance in moderate tempo that originated in Poland. It developed from folk dances that were accompanied by singing, most of which were in triple meter and without upbeats. When members of the upper class began to use such pieces at court, the vocal parts were abandoned and the dance music was performed by the instrumental ensembles that usually accompanied court functions. During the early Baroque era, pieces called "Polish dances" were written by numerous composers; those that would become known as the "polonaise" (a French term) did not appear until the seventeenth century. By the eighteenth century, the polonaise became an instrumental work independent of its dance origins and exhibiting the following characteristics: triple meter, moderate tempo, lack of upbeats, and repetition of rhythmic figures. In the Classical era, polonaises came to possess broader, more expressive melodies and sometimes included a trio section (as in a minuet) or were set in rondo form. Chopin's works in the genre have become the most prominent examples.

When Chopin composed his first polonaises, the dance had been known throughout Europe for two centuries and had taken on a conventional character. Even Chopin's first essays in the genre were not especially Polish in style, belonging instead to the stile brilliant. Of these early works, that in B flat major, Op. 70, No. 2, composed in 1828, looks forward to the composer's later polonaises in its expanded form and majestic character. Possibly because of Chopin's later separation from his homeland, his mature polonaises would become symbols of Polish nationalism for both the composer and, especially, other Poles. The works were received as defiant outburst in the struggle of an oppressed and partitioned nation. Some were associated with specific historical events: Op. 40, No. 1 was perceived as evoking the battle of the Hussards of Subieski and Op. 44, the battle of Grochów. By the time Chopin composed his Two Polonaises, Op. 26, in 1834-5, he had become the darling of the musical establishment in Paris, where they were published in 1836.

Forceful, almost violent gestures open the Polonaise in C sharp minor, Op. 26, No. 1. The aggressive rhythm and bare octaves, played fortissimo, call attention to themselves, as does the heavy-handed cadence of the next two measures, played even more loudly. What is striking is that these first four measures are really an introduction, or upbeat, to the polonaise proper; yet, Chopin has given them tremendous weight. We find this characteristic in nearly all of the late polonaises. Chopin creates forward impetus in the ensuing eight-measure first theme, with its gradually rising and falling melody, by delaying the cadence on C sharp minor until the last beat of the last measure. After the typical repeat of this melody, complete with introduction, the two-part contrasting theme of the first section begins and Chopin maintains the momentum through syncopation, increasing dynamics, and a rapid, rising flourish that spans nearly two octaves. A return of the first theme rounds out the section.

Numerous literal repetitions of the main theme in the first section increase the sense of contrast afforded by the middle section. In D flat major (enharmonic with C sharp major, the tonic major), the middle section's ornamentation and expressive harmonies create a lyrical episode. At the beginning of the secondary theme of this section, we hear the melody in the bass while the right hand plays a countermelody with repeated chords. Unlike the second polonaise of Op. 26, the first adopts the traditional da capo format, with a literal repeat of the first section.

Description by John Palmer

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