Frédéric Chopin - Rondo à la mazur op. 5(1825 or 1826)(Bozhanov)(with full score)
ฝัง
- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 ก.ย. 2024
- Pf. Evgeni Bozhanov (in Chopin Piano Competition)
The Rondo à la mazur in F major, Op. 5, was written by Polish composer, Frédéric Chopin in 1826, when he was 16, and published in 1828. It was the second of his four rondos, and is dedicated to the Countess Alexandrine de Moriolles, the daughter of the Comte de Moriolles, who was the tutor to the adopted son of the Grand Duke Constantine, Governor of Warsaw. It is the only one of the four rondos not written in 2/4 time.
Chopin wrote the piece while studying at the Warsaw Conservatory. It is a bravura piece, and technically more assured than his Opus 1, the Rondo in C minor. His teacher Józef Elsner had also written two rondos marked à la mazur, and they may have inspired the title, but Chopin's rondo displays none of Elsner's influence. Instead, there is much of Chopin's own originality.
The opening theme, in F major, is in the rhythm of a mazurka. A second theme, in B-flat, marked Tranquillamente e cantabile, appears, before the main theme returns. The piece is notable for Chopin's very early use of the sharpened 4th degree characteristic of the Lydian mode.
Robert Schumann first heard the Rondo à la mazur in 1836, and he called it "lovely, enthusiastic and full of grace. He who does not yet know Chopin had best begin the acquaintance with this piece".
Bozhanov best interpretation.
Trifonov's is also great.
Nope, sometimes more like rondo alla marcia (when unnecessary)...
He was 15? It sounds so much more complex than some of his later works. Especially the first years of the 1830s
Simplicity is the final achievement
Maybe he composed later for the "hobby-Pianists" to earn more money with that?
I don't know. How ever, in my opinion the best composer of all time
I think he composed it when he was 18, but i'm not sure
@@felixwidmoserin 1825 or 1826 Chopin was either 14, 15, or 16.
It definitely sounds very Polish.
Wonderful rendition!
Very cool piece. The initial melody has a kind of “unexpectedness” to it that really catches your ears.
This is a VERY HARD piece!
The first few notes make up Simpsons, you know you know
That's because both uses tritones. C and F# for the Simpsons, and F and B natural for this mazurka.
I want to share this with you. I wanted to be a profesional musician because of this.
6:32
If you like this piece you should check it out his polonaise op 71 no 2 . It have the same vibes but imo it's more tender
00:46 / 04:04 reminds me of both the etude op. 25 #3 and the ending of the 3rd mvt. of the F-minor piano concerto
08:06 also you have this part simmilar to op 10 no.8
so dreamy~
The ending is similar to Op 10 No 8
6:33
Circle of fifths progression, beautiful!
rondo a la simpsons
Yeah they both have that Lydian quality
Dont ruin the rondo ,please
Chopin sitting in B-flat, very young. Later on he was partial to A-flat and C-sharp minor. Anyway, beautiful rendition. Thanks for posting!
This piece is in F major. Chopin composed in a wide variety of keys.
@@remomazzetti8757 Correct. The piece itself is in F, but a lot of it sits in B-flat, the subdominant. When I was a teenager, just for fun, I made a list of Chopin's works and found that his most used major key was A-flat and his most minor key was C# minor.
@@cimbalok2972 I did the same experiment some months ago. While A-flat major is by far the most used major key in Chopin's work, with 25 pieces on that key, it seems that his most used minor key is actually F minor, in 17 pieces. The second place, among the minor keys, ties between C-sharp minor and A minor, both with 15 uses
@@Henri.d.Olivoir I'll have to go down my list and find the 17 in F minor. Thanks for the info!
@@cimbalok2972 Hahahahhahah no problem!
Is Evgeny Bozhanov ?
The Simspons Theme
Según fuentes, Chopin no apreciaba esta obra tanto como las demas, sentía que no representaba su madurez musical.