Posted on 09/14/2012 6:02:45 PM PDT by AZamericonnie
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LOVE YOU CANTEEN DJ'S!!! Thanks for your hard work! GodBlessUSA; mylife; AZAmericonnie; Kathy In Alaska; Ms.Behavin; drumbo; StarCMC; EsmeraldaA; ConorMacNessa; acad1228; LibertyValance; Sir Francis Dashwood; Cindy; Starwise; 50mm; gomez; iron munro; publius (and me) YOU ROCK OUT LOUD!! God bless our troops!!! |
Happt Days are Bound our way.
Then a friend of Georges, Pauline Viardot, entered Freds life. Those who remember the series I did on Brahms will remember her. Pauline was a lifelong friend of Clara Schumann, a fine pianist who took lessons from Franz Liszt himself, and one of the great opera singers of her age. Thirty years later, Pauline and Brahms were to meet at the resort town of Baden, Brahms was to write some songs for her and they may have tumbled into bed.
Pauline was a tonic in Freds life. He now had a musical equal with whom he could play four-handed piano duets and discuss the finer points of music. This is why 1846 was the last year of major works and masterpieces and what a set of masterpieces!
There is an understanding among pianists that the very greatest piece of music Chopin ever wrote was his Barcarolle. Watch the way he builds suspense with the middle section that begins at 3:15. The return to the first section at 6:30 is magical.
The pause at the cadence at 7:06 is milked just a bit by Rubinstein in this recording. In 1980 I saw Peter Serkin perform this piece at Royce Hall at UCLA, and he milked this pause for almost a full five seconds before completing the cadence. You could see the audience leaning forward in suspense just waiting for it.
Good evening, Kathy! *HUGS* Had to get horizontal - overdid it today!
Greetings & Salutations to our Troops, Allies and the FR Canteen Crew!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vwNRsaEWD3M&feature=related
Suzy Bogguss - Outbound Plane
I wish to acknowledge Jeremy Denks analysis of the piece. Jeremy thinks Im a pretentious fool, but when you have his kind of talent, youre entitled to think what you wish. I acknowledge him as one of the towering intellects in music today. He is the best teacher and performer of the music of the American composer Charles Ives that Ive ever encountered. Heres Jeremy:
Chopin begins with two announcing chords, and then follows them with a long unmeasured arpeggio, prolonging the harmony of the second chord. These arpeggios have, in a way, a mundane purpose. They fill up the thwunk and the attack of the piano with beauty: the arpeggio sails languidly into the dead space, the still lagoon of the notes decay. But this is not all. A kind of rhythm is established, in this very unrhythmic beginning, a rhythm of events: chords, fermata, arpeggio: act, stop, listen. The pauses are quite long deliberately almost too long and so the action is weighted towards listening (thought) and against action. The pianist does something, plays two significant or signifying chords, then is forced to meditate on what he or she has done: the arpeggios are parentheses seeming to be inaction, but perhaps are the truer action (meditation, understanding). In creating this pace of events, by building in reflection and observation, Chopin creates an unusual kind of beginning. This piece does not begin in order to begin, but rather in order to summon some spirit to allow us to begin: in other words, the introduction is an invocation. And of course the spirit Chopin is patiently invoking is sound, the resonance of the piano, the ringing of the wood, some appreciation of the beauty of the struck harmonies drifting through time. This often odd enforced listening to retained, held notes persists. Chopin extracts, strangely, the middle voice from the chord, forces us to listen to it for a moment alone, then uses it as a pivot to the next event. Hes trying to encourage complex listening skills, by delving into the crusty middles of chords! Definitely not a superficial thrill, but a thrill for those in the know.
Damn, that Jeremy can write! The first theme begins at 2:10.
At 3:32, from Jeremy:
Twice Chopin makes us listen to the B-flat alone, while the rest of the voices attempt to cadence around it, before ending simply, perfectly, profoundly.
At 6:12, from Jeremy:
We start with the bluster of a diminished seventh chord that explodes into a massive chromatic whorl. Standard Romantic expostulation? Maybe you have the feeling that this is a bridge too far, the chromatics too oozy, the dramas outsized: youre right about that. For the bluster somewhat obviously, tiredly wears itself out, the curlicue oozes downwards, loses steam, loses faith in itself and we finally settle on a lone F#. What was the point? If you feel also that the new key has not quite been prepared by all this flailing about, that the transition has been ineffective, youre right about that too: for, now, a true preparation comes as a rebuke to the false preparation. Look, see, the F# is looking for a context; Chopin makes us listen to it for a moment, alone, then with a strangely sour chord, then alone again, then with the right chord, waiting, waiting, waiting, and then the epiphany comes, utterly different from any previous moment in the piece, or any moment to come.
Chopins simplicity rebukes Chopins complexity. The Genius of Chopin is sitting there, in his self-rebuke, sandwiched between an almost-cliched chromatic transition, a pedal point, and a lyrical slow section rocking between the two most common chords there are: this glimpse of screw-you-I-can-write-something-so-beautiful-thats-made-of-almost-nothing, as an unearthly transition between things that are also almost nothing. The four mysterious bars are a messenger, unveiling a new chapter before vanishing, a chapter which turns out to be the quietly beating heart of the piece.
I want to go back to that long pause on the F#. One of the great and strange elements of the Polonaise-Fantasie, one of its themes, is that the act of listening is woven into its fabric. Chopin wants you to listen carefully! thoughtfully! to certain sounds, certain pitches, certain moments; the structure of the story he is telling is utterly dependent upon this listening. But he knows that listening is an inherently lazy activity, often thoughtless, often lulling itself into complacency. Just look around the boxes of Carnegie some night if you dont believe me on this. [Sometimes I look out into the crowd while Im playing and I will see some rapt individual beaming ecstasy, and I will tell myself not to look any more, but then I cant help it, I look around later and there is some guy searching the back of the program for classified ads and clearly desperate to get out of my concert and straight to the liquor store and then home to ESPN.] Anyway. So Chopin writes enforced listening moments into the piece strangely arresting moments, like that F# held, alone, then heard against an astringent dissonance, then heard alone again, then heard against the correct dissonance, the dominant seventh moments that enact, in a kind of slo-mo, the very process of hearing dissonances resolve against a pedal.
And you thought nothing more could be wrung out of that old whore, dominant-and-tonic! Hard to know why this is so astoundingly beautiful. In the left hand a wave, rising-falling, and in the right hand the intersecting wave, more muted, as if a mere reflection of or commentary on the larger wave.
The slow B Major central section is technically rather difficult. There are three themes going on at once, and the thumbs of both hands are crossed over each other at times. Its hard to articulate everything clearly. At 8:28, this section transitions to G# minor for a song of heartbreak. It wraps up with trills and a short return to the B Major theme. Then the arpeggios of the beginning of the piece return, but shortened. At 10:44, the G# minor theme of heartbreak returns in G minor, quietly and shortened. Its not heartbreak anymore, just the memory of heartbreak. It ends with a rushed section leading to the recapitulation of the first theme, and what an orgasmic recap! This is where you have to give the audience a sense of homecoming. The coda is amazing.
At 12:52 from Jeremy:
But the most wonderful, strange example of enforced listening is at the end of the piece. We are flush from the ecstasy of a climax, an A-flat Major explosion of the slow section theme; this ecstasy is slowly winding down. Chopin gracefully abandons the energy of the climax, unravels it in circles, and in the echoing of this happiness he finds something unlooked-for, a kind of dark second thought. This darkness or sadness, if you like complicates the emotional image of the end, disrupts the fading bliss. And then Chopin throws over the ending a magnificent anomaly. As you see above, the dark measures cadence, we have a quiet, low A-flat major chord the piece might be over? and then while the low chord still sounds in the pedal, Chopin instructs the pianist to play one loud A-flat Major chord, in the high register.
Yow! The luminous final chord then resounds against the dark overtones of the previous bars: a jarring double image, a bright light on a dark canvas. The effect is not either of those chords, but how you hear them decay together, their resonant death.
The pianists typical virtuosic, towering gesture is to try to sum up all the registers of the piano at once, to be everywhere at once, to be (sort of) an orchestra. This is the pianist equivalent of the phallic, mid-life crisis truck purchase. Chopin is past such insecurities; here, things are definitely not all at once: the chord, the sensation, the understanding of the ending is assembled from disparate parts, foundation and overtone mismatched. Its as though two endings are superimposed the brilliant ending that could have been, the sad ending that could have been and therefore the actual ending is a rare hybrid, with genes of two could-have-beens.
Chopin could have finished the piece with a surge, one last surge to victory; but no, he is not finishing a piece, he is finishing a thought; this is a moment not for the pianists glory but for one last, complex listening. Listening between two layers of sound. My late great teacher used to talk about Chopins hypersensitivity, his mind like the paws of a cat, and then he would take his stocky Hungarian body, once employed as prisoner of war to break stones in the Carpathian mountains, and with a few gestures and a lifted eyebrow hed make himself seem as light as a cats step, and with feathery gestures of his hand hed come down on the piano, on some simple but illuminating pair of harmonies, and then his eye would meet my eye and I felt he was trying to communicate to over privileged American me Chopins vast refinement of thought and elegance and culture, how he valiantly rescued the original from the salons tremendous pressure of cliché, elusive fragile epiphanies of sound, standing on the summit of the pianos wood-and-wire construction.
Oh man, I wish I could write like that! If you want to understand this piece, follow along with Jeremy Denk, and then listen to it a second time uninterrupted.
Lots of good wallerin’ music tonight.
~~Tunes For The Troops~~ |
Want more information about the artists we play? Perhaps you'd like to buy concert tickets or their CDs? Click the links provided at the top of the thread for more information! |
~~Tunes For The Troops~~ |
Want more information about the artists we play? Perhaps you'd like to buy concert tickets or their CDs? Click the links provided at the top of the thread for more information! |
Sure looks like it...and I shall be doing some of that after the tuneage is done. :)
Good job, Maestro!
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