Frédéric Chopin
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Re: Frédéric Chopin
Chopin's Impromptus in the Paderewski edition :
http://www.mediafire.com/?4p3awm401m4mr28
I'm looking for the nocturnes in the Paderewski edition. Does anyone have them ?
http://www.mediafire.com/?4p3awm401m4mr28
I'm looking for the nocturnes in the Paderewski edition. Does anyone have them ?
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Re: Frédéric Chopin
Does anyone have information about Chopin piano Method?
Thank you.
R
Thank you.
R
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Re: Frédéric Chopin
This is the only one that I have (nms). ILU.worov wrote:Chopin's Impromptus in the Paderewski edition :
http://www.mediafire.com/?4p3awm401m4mr28
I'm looking for the nocturnes in the Paderewski edition. Does anyone have them ?
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Quo melius Illac
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Re: Frédéric Chopin
Jacques Loussier used to be highly effective at jazzing up Bach.
Peter Beets now seems to be doing a very similar job with Chopin.
This guy is so cool he just has to be a recycled fridge!
Check out his irresistible take on the Waltz in C sharp minor
Op64 No2, as well as the various links on this YouTube clip:-
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jFXE3wyvn-g
Peter Beets now seems to be doing a very similar job with Chopin.
This guy is so cool he just has to be a recycled fridge!
Check out his irresistible take on the Waltz in C sharp minor
Op64 No2, as well as the various links on this YouTube clip:-
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jFXE3wyvn-g
Re: Frédéric Chopin
You should try all the Polish jazz pianists who've been riffing of Chopin since at least the 60s.Timtin wrote:Jacques Loussier used to be highly effective at jazzing up Bach.
Peter Beets now seems to be doing a very similar job with Chopin.
Wlodzimierz Nahorny (who also did a Szymanowski album)
Leszek Możdżer
Andrzej Jagodzinski
And then there's the incomparable Eugen Cicero...
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Re: Frédéric Chopin
Hmm,
Visited the link -
I don't speak Dutch, but I think the meaning of the first comment was clear enough and very passionately expressed.
Was it, however, derogatory or laudatory- of this I was uncertain.
regards,
tobyjj
Visited the link -
I don't speak Dutch, but I think the meaning of the first comment was clear enough and very passionately expressed.
Was it, however, derogatory or laudatory- of this I was uncertain.
regards,
tobyjj
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Re: Frédéric Chopin
I don't speak any Dutch either, but it seems as though he's talking about 3/4 time,
somehow turning Dave Brubeck's famous Take Five (5/4 time) into Take Three!
somehow turning Dave Brubeck's famous Take Five (5/4 time) into Take Three!
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Re: Frédéric Chopin
Hmm,
I was referring to the comment which I think probably translates as something like:
"Dude, This is my favourite waltz, but this version = truly f... etc."
Interesting that it is open to so many different interpretations ...
tobyjj
I was referring to the comment which I think probably translates as something like:
"Dude, This is my favourite waltz, but this version = truly f... etc."
Interesting that it is open to so many different interpretations ...

tobyjj
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Re: Frédéric Chopin
Hi Toby, Timtin,tobyjj wrote:Hmm,
I was referring to the comment which I think probably translates as something like:
"Dude, This is my favourite waltz, but this version = truly f... etc."
Interesting that it is open to so many different interpretations ...![]()
tobyjj
you are pretty close with your translation, he is firstly congratulating himself on reworking the Waltz number 7 in 5/4 time, 1,2,1,2,3. He then goes on to ask the audience to buy his Cd's as it was a 200km trip with no other gigs to Leeuwarden. There was nothing derogatory in his remarks at all, just praise for himself, "knap gedaan" is " What a clever bit of work"
regards
Brian
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Re: Frédéric Chopin
It doesn't actually exist as a complete method, as he only sketched a few pages which were bequeathed to C.V. Alkan after Chopin's death.arneros wrote:Does anyone have information about Chopin piano Method?
Thank you.
R
Jean-Jaques Eigeldinger's book: Chopin as Pianist & Teacher is the best resource into Chopin's teaching from accounts of his pupils and fellow musicians. The Sketch of a Method is included in facsimile and typeset, but mostly consists of a scale in B major and a chromatic scale, with some basic information on placing the hands of the keyboard and maintaining "souplesse". The entire book is a kind of grand treatise on what the method of Chopin would have become had he lived to complete it, and perhaps even surpasses what Chopin would have been capable of writing on his own approach.