The COMPLETE Chopin Nocturnes are now available here 👉 th-cam.com/video/IVpuTD-2SEo/w-d-xo.html You who made this possible! A million times THANK YOU ❤️
time stamps: Douze Etudes Op. 25: No. 1 "Aeolian Harp" (00:00) Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1 (02:27) Nocturne in F# major Op. 15 No. 2 (07:44) Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1 wait again?(11:08) Nocturne in B major Op. 32 No. 1 (16:33) Nocturne in C minor Op. 48 No. 1 (20:30) Nocturne Op. posth. No. 20 in C sharp Minor (25:06) Nocturne in D-flat major Op. 27 No. 2 (29:04) Nocturne in E-flat major Op. 9 No. 2 (33:35) Nocturne in E minor Op. 72 No. 1 (38:18) Nocturne in F# major Op. 15 No. 2 (41:43) Nocturne in F# minor Op. 48 No. 2 (44:27) Nocturne in G minor Op. 15 No. 3 (49:10) Prelude in E minor Op. 28 No. 4 (53:50) Prelude in D-flat major Op. 28 No. 15 "Raindrop" (55:54) Prelude in A major Op. 28 No. 7 (1:01:29) Polonaise in A-flat major, Op. 53 "Heroic Polonaise" (1:02:27) Polonaise in C sharp minor Op. 26 No. 1 (1:10:38) Prelude in E-flat minor Op. 28 No. 14 (1:17:19) Prelude in A-flat major Op. 28 No. 17 (1:19:03) Prelude in F minor Op. 28 No 18 (1:20:17) Prelude in G major Op. 28 No. 3 (1:21:05) Prelude in B minor Op. 28 No. 6 (1:22:07) Prelude in F# minor Op. 28 No. 8 (1:24:14) Waltz in F minor Op. 70 No. 2 (1:26:10) Waltz in A minor Op. 34 No. 2 (1:33:06) Waltz in D-flat major Op. 64 No. 1 “Minute Waltz” (1:34:35) Grande Valse Brillante Op. 18 (1:36:20) Waltz in A Flat major, Op. 69 No. 1 (1:38:22)
Douze Etudes Op. 25: No. 1 "Aeolian Harp" (00:00) Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1 (02:27) Nocturne in F# major Op. 15 No. 2 (07:44) Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1 (11:08) Nocturne in B major Op. 32 No. 1 (16:33) Nocturne in C minor Op. 48 No. 1 (20:30) Nocturne Op. posth. No. 20 in C sharp Minor (25:06) Nocturne in D-flat major Op. 27 No. 2 (29:02) Nocturne in E-flat major Op. 9 No. 2 (33:35) Nocturne in E minor Op. 72 No. 1 (38:18) Nocturne in F# minor Op. 15 No. 2 (41:43) Nocturne in F# minor Op. 48 No. 2 (44:27) Nocturne in G minor Op. 15 No. 3 (50:59) Prelude in E minor Op. 28 No. 4 (55:33) Prelude in D-flat major Op. 28 No. 15 "Raindrop" (57:09) Prelude in A major Op. 28 No. 7 (1:03:14) Polonaise in A-flat major, Op. 53 "Heroic Polonaise" (1:04:11) Polonaise in C sharp minor Op. 26 No. 1 (1:10:38) Prelude in E-flat minor Op. 28 No. 14 (1:18:29) Prelude in A-flat major Op. 28 No. 17 (1:19:03) Prelude in F minor Op. 28 No 18 (1:22:02) Prelude in G major Op. 28 No. 3 (1:22:50) Prelude in B minor Op. 28 No. 6 (1:23:52) Prelude in F# minor Op. 28 No. 8 (1:26:00) Scherzo No. 2 Op. 31 (1:27:50) Waltz in F minor Op. 70 No. 2 (1:37:49) Waltz in A minor Op. 34 No. 2 (1:40:47) Waltz in D-flat major Op. 64 No. 1 “Minute Waltz” (1:46:15) Grande Valse Brillante Op. 18 (1:48:00) Waltz in A Flat major, Op. 69 No. 1 (1:50:05) txs for all the likes!
I have been using this Chopin music to study for over a decade now. First as an undergraduate, then for my masters, then for med school, then during residency. Chopin has been there every step of the way.
Thank you for saying. This clip as a compilation I’ve been listening to for over a decade. I hope you’re finding the same peace in his music as I do. Continuously. Thank you to the guys who posted it in the first place.
"Varsovian by birth, a Pole at heart, and through his talent a citizen of the world" - C.K.Norwid about Fryderyk Chopin (Norwid was a writer and Chopin's friend). Best regards from Poland.
@@patrykrokosz1112 I'm sorry to bring it to you, but did you know, I bet you didn't, that all humanity has it's origin in the deep, deep heart of africa? Think before you talk :)
I’ve just been in Poland and fell in love with the country but mostly with Chopin and the beautiful park at Lazenski where you can hear the most beautiful Chopin music performed right beneath his monument. Breathtaking place and of course the mesmerizing music. I just keep coming back to his music ever since.
"Simplicity is the final achievement. After one has played a vast quantity of notes and more notes, it is simplicity that emerges as the crowning reward of art". Frédéric Chopin❤️
I’m polish, and I’m proud we had and still have, coz his music still alive, musician like Chopin😌his music never forgotten🙏I’m cryin Iistening this magician partitures, polonaises and etudees 🥺god bless you good people🙋♂️
“Bach is an astronomer, discovering the most marvelous stars. Beethoven challenges the universe. I only try to express the soul and the heart of man.” - Chopin
I find it fascinating that everyone plays Chopin differently. I don't think there's another composer whose music has so much texturing, intimacy, delicacy, and expressiveness arranged in such a way that it is is not possible for any player to keep their inner self hidden. So revealing, so revelatory.
Chopin died in 1849 but his music is alive ! He was a genius and remains my favorite composer. His Noctures , in particular Nocturne 1 , with their melancholy and extreme sensitivity bring tears to my eyes each time . Chopin was a piano teacher and I can only imagine having a teacher like him , what a dream it would be 💗
I mean... a teacher of this caliber with his level of output, I'd be surprised if he would be the chill guy you speak of when it came to playing the piano, I wouldn't be surprised if he was harsh with his students.
@@christine6014 You probably know why his music is sad. Chopin's longing for Poland and his family. Homeland, his countrymen were under a Russian tyranny. Hence his melancholy. Cheers!
This playlist is kind special for me. It helped me writing my graduation final paper. It was really hard and sometimes I was very tired, but listening to Chopin was the best medicine.
Thanks dearest Chopin for having made me entirely happy since my adolescence ! you know I fell in love with you!!! and you personally helped me in that examen!! but I passed successfully but...did not become a concertist but a writer!...just to tell about you...your life...your love!!! Thanks...my love....!!!!!
+adela ferrero fucing hell are you one of those bollox romance novelist nuters that considers themselves a writer, your a fuck wit beyond belif ! that comment was cheesy and for a writer, well !
No buddy, there is no need to be a God nut, life is about finding a balance in the things you do. What i meant to say with that comment was that you sound like an unhappy person, you were insulting a woman that has done nothing to you, and you think it's ok to do so because you hide behind the computer screen, and your ways tell me you are a coward and a lost man..you take care of your self, hope it gets better for ya.
Actually, I listen to classical music how I'm feel bad or tired myself, it's helpful! I'm looking on ugly stuff around and starting to think about art... And it's great, what even in Texas exist people with soul...
0:00:00 Étude No. 13 in A flat major “Aeolian Harp”, Op. 25/1 0:02:27 Nocturne No. 1 in B flat minor, Op. 9/1 0:07:45 Nocturne No. 5 in F sharp major, Op. 15/2 0:11:09 Nocturne No. 1 in B flat minor, Op. 9/1 (Reprise) 0:16:34 Nocturne No. 9 in B major, Op. 32/1 0:20:31 Nocturne No. 13 in C minor, Op. 48/1 0:25:06 Nocturne No. 20 in C sharp minor, B. 49 0:29:05 Nocturne No. 8 in D flat major, Op. 27/2 0:33:37 Nocturne No. 2 in E flat major, Op. 9/2 0:38:24 Nocturne No. 5 in F sharp major, Op. 15/2 (Reprise) 0:41:09 Nocturne No. 14 in F sharp minor, Op. 48/2 (Broken) 0:45:54 Nocturne No. 6 in G minor, Op. 15/3 0:50:30 Prélude No. 4 in E minor, Op. 28/4 0:52:35 Prélude No. 15 in D flat major “Raindrop”, Op. 28/15 0:58:10 Prélude No. 7 in A major, Op. 28/7 0:59:08 Polonaise No. 6 in A flat major “Polonaise héroïque”, Op. 53 1:05:35 Polonaise No. 1 in C sharp minor, Op. 26/1 1:13:26 Prélude No. 14 in E flat minor, Op. 28/14 1:14:00 Prélude No. 17 in A flat major, Op. 28/17 1:16:58 Prélude No. 18 in F minor, Op. 28/18 1:17:45 Prélude No. 3 in G major, Op. 28/3 1:18:48 Prélude No. 6 in B minor, Op. 28/6 1:20:55 Prélude No. 8 in F sharp minor, Op, 28/8 1:22:46 Scherzo No. 2 in B flat minor, Op. 31 1:32:45 Waltz No. 12 in F minor, Op. posth. 70/2 1:35:43 Waltz No. 3 in A minor, Op. 34/2 1:41:11 Waltz No. 6 in D flat major “Minute Waltz”, Op. 64/1 1:42:56 Waltz No. 1 in E flat major “Grande valse brillante”, Op. 18 1:45:00 Waltz No. 9 in A flat major “L'adieu”, Op. 69/1 “These are actually correct version.” “These are actually correct version.” “These are actually correct version.”
Buenos días , mi amigo Chopin gracias por la valiosa música que nos deja con gran orgullo se siente Paz interior en nuestro corazón un abrazo amigo dónde quieras q estés gracias
This summer I've been in Poland, and there I read a sentence which was taken from the "Revue et Gazette Musicale de Paris" in 1838. This sentence was more or less like this "When asked who is the first pianist in the world: Liszt or Thalberg, there is only one answer: Chopin". Simply marvelous.
As a child my Mom would play Chopin on the piano, I would settle down on the floor and fall asleep listening to this fantastic music. Thank you Mom and thank you Chopin. Gifts of the Living God!
modern day music can be very good in my opinion.....But classical music has everything! It can bring you on a journey, but it can also make you awe and wonder...and quiet for a moment. It has no lyrics to tell the story....it just gently pushes you in a certain direction so your mind can figure out the rest. and when that happens....it grips your soul. Thank you Chopin for your gifts to the world :)
Yess that’s exactly how I feel. It takes me somewhere else. It’s amazing. That’s how I try to explain it to people. You did a remarkable job at detailing your experience with this piece
All of a sudden, I started feeling something in my chest while listening to this. Now I really want to cry and I don't even know why. Guess that's the power of music, it reveals your deepest feelings.
time stamps: Douze Etudes Op. 25: No. 1 "Aeolian Harp" (00:00) Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1 (02:27) Nocturne in F# major Op. 15 No. 2 (07:44) Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1 wait again?(11:08) Nocturne in B major Op. 32 No. 1 (16:33) Nocturne in C minor Op. 48 No. 1 (20:30) Nocturne Op. posth. No. 20 in C sharp Minor (25:06) Nocturne in D-flat major Op. 27 No. 2 (29:04) Nocturne in E-flat major Op. 9 No. 2 (33:35) Nocturne in E minor Op. 72 No. 1 (38:18) Nocturne in F# major Op. 15 No. 2 (41:43) Nocturne in F# minor Op. 48 No. 2 (44:27) Nocturne in G minor Op. 15 No. 3 (49:10) Prelude in E minor Op. 28 No. 4 (53:50) Prelude in D-flat major Op. 28 No. 15 "Raindrop" (55:54) Prelude in A major Op. 28 No. 7 (1:01:29) Polonaise in A-flat major, Op. 53 "Heroic Polonaise" (1:02:27) Polonaise in C sharp minor Op. 26 No. 1 (1:10:38) Prelude in E-flat minor Op. 28 No. 14 (1:17:19) Prelude in A-flat major Op. 28 No. 17 (1:19:03) Prelude in F minor Op. 28 No 18 (1:20:17) Prelude in G major Op. 28 No. 3 (1:21:05) Prelude in B minor Op. 28 No. 6 (1:22:07) Prelude in F# minor Op. 28 No. 8 (1:24:14) Waltz in F minor Op. 70 No. 2 (1:26:10) Waltz in A minor Op. 34 No. 2 (1:33:06) Waltz in D-flat major Op. 64 No. 1 “Minute Waltz” (1:34:35) Grande Valse Brillante Op. 18 (1:36:20) Waltz in A Flat major, Op. 69 No. 1 (1:38:22)
The most beautiful music in the world! Iam proud that it was our compatriot who composed such wonderful masterpieces ....I always shed a tear with this music ...
So sad that this great composer (if not the greatest) lived for only 39 years. If he had lived longer, he probably would have given us more masterpieces.
listen to Chopin leaves me back as a better person, thinking more positively about others and the world. Big respect to Pianists who are able to play it.
THE BEST OF CHOPIN | TRACKLIST 1. Douze Etudes Op. 25: No. 1 "Aeolian Harp" (00:00) 2. Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1 (02:27) 3. Nocturne in F# major Op. 15 No. 2 (07:44) 4. Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1 (11:08) 5. Nocturne in B major Op. 32 No. 1 (16:33) 6. Nocturne in C minor Op. 48 No. 1 (20:30) 7. Nocturne Op. posth. No. 20 in C sharp Minor (25:06) 8. Nocturne in D-flat major Op. 27 No. 2 (29:02) 9. Nocturne in E-flat major Op. 9 No. 2 (33:35) 10. Nocturne in E minor Op. 72 No. 1 (38:18) 11. Nocturne in F# minor Op. 15 No. 2 (41:43) 12. Nocturne in F# minor Op. 48 No. 2 (44:27) 13. Nocturne in G minor Op. 15 No. 3 (50:59) 14. Prelude in E minor Op. 28 No. 4 (55:33) 15. Prelude in D-flat major Op. 28 No. 15 "Raindrop" (57:39) 16. Prelude in A major Op. 28 No. 7 (1:03:14) 17. Polonaise in A-flat major, Op. 53 "Heroic Polonaise" (1:04:11) 18. Polonaise in C sharp minor Op. 26 No. 1 (1:10:38) 19. Prelude in E-flat minor Op. 28 No. 14 (1:18:29) 20. Prelude in A-flat major Op. 28 No. 17 (1:19:03) 21. Prelude in F minor Op. 28 No 18 (1:22:02) 22. Prelude in G major Op. 28 No. 3 (1:22:50) 23. Prelude in B minor Op. 28 No. 6 (1:23:52) 24. Prelude in F# minor Op. 28 No. 8 (1:26:00) 25. Scherzo No. 2 Op. 31 (1:27:50) 26. Waltz in F minor Op. 70 No. 2 (1:37:49) 27. Waltz in A minor Op. 34 No. 2 (1:40:47) 28. Waltz in D-flat major Op. 64 No. 1 “Minute Waltz” (1:46:15) 29. Grande Valse Brillante Op. 18 (1:48:00) 30. Waltz in A Flat major, Op. 69 No. 1 (1:50:05)
00:00 Douze Etudes Op. 25: No. 1 "Aeolian Harp" 02:27 Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1 07:44 Nocturne in F# major Op. 15 No. 2 11:08 Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1 16:33 Nocturne in B major Op. 32 No. 1 20:30 Nocturne in C minor Op. 48 No. 1 25:06 Nocturne Op. posth. No. 20 in C sharp Minor 29:02 Nocturne in D-flat major Op. 27 No. 2 33:35 Nocturne in E-flat major Op. 9 No. 2 38:18 Nocturne in E minor Op. 72 No. 1 41:43 Nocturne in F# minor Op. 15 No. 2 44:27 Nocturne in F# minor Op. 48 No. 2 50:59 Nocturne in G minor Op. 15 No. 3 55:33 Prelude in E minor Op. 28 No. 4 57:39 Prelude in D-flat major Op. 28 No. 15 "Raindrop" 1:03:14 Prelude in A major Op. 28 No. 7 1:04:11 Polonaise in A-flat major, Op. 53 "Heroic Polonaise" 1:10:38 Polonaise in C sharp minor Op. 26 No. 1 1:18:29 Prelude in E-flat minor Op. 28 No. 14 1:19:03 Prelude in A-flat major Op. 28 No. 17 1:22:02 Prelude in F minor Op. 28 No 18 1:22:50 Prelude in G major Op. 28 No. 3 1:23:52 Prelude in B minor Op. 28 No. 6 1:26:00 Prelude in F# minor Op. 28 No. 8 1:27:50 Scherzo No. 2 Op. 31 1:37:49 Waltz in F minor Op. 70 No. 2 1:40:47 Waltz in A minor Op. 34 No. 2 1:46:15 Waltz in D-flat major Op. 64 No. 1 “Minute Waltz” 1:48:00 Grande Valse Brillante Op. 18 1:50:05 Waltz in A Flat major, Op. 69 No. 1
Chopin, a real fighter and patriot for his home land Poland.His passion for his home land was his main source of inspiration.From the age of 5 Chopin was the musician that marked me and make me love music.Chopin love from Greece you will live forever in our hearts!
I cry every time I listen to Chopin's music as my son used to play Chopin when he was younger. He wanted to be a concert pianist. Now he is a lawyer and harly play the piano. He still play the ogan in the church but even this one is getting lesser. Adult life has taken away his fun. He has to earn to pay the mortgage.
Chopin never fails to put me to sleep. I’m not well versed in music terminology, so you’ll have to pardon me, but it feels like his piano is a bird that returned to a nest built months ago after a long winter frost’s chirps. It’s so calming, yet so stimulating. I’m not someone who typically enjoys this style of music. I actually prefer mid 2000s alt rock and 80s post-punk discotheque. Honestly, this is astoundingly good. As I type these last few words, I drift off to sleep. Before that though, I want to say that no matter who you may be, someone out there appreciates you. Keep on moving. Keep that drive. Good luck and good night.
Who actually searches for classical/romance period music, finds this page and then THUMBS IT DOWN? If you can't appreciate the greatest musical genius of all time then you are truly lost and have no love in your heart.
Nothing like some relief from the crazy world we found ourselves in this year. Remember all, people have had it much worse than us and pulled through. Be strong and be safe.
@Mateusz Wilk You said the right words. Probably he is playing piano in haven now. His compositions were more than compositions; they were love expressed by piano strings. He still my favorite piano composer.
@@marccalebflores8270 Unfortunately he died so young. Can you imagine how many more wonderful songs would he left if his life was longer? My best piano composer. Abbey Simon, one of the best pianist of Chopin songs once said that Chopin was one of the great inspiration in his carrier as piano player.
If you really like piano music, this is the best selection... and the best pianist and piano compositer of all times in the music history... Thank you Master Chopin...
My all time favorite composer He could make you laugh,cry,smile,frown all in the same nocturne and in different majors and minors Truly expressed the soul of humanity and his music still has such an impact on my daily life Thank you fryderyk chopin
Thank you for saying that. I’m Polish and I cherish this guy. An orchestra in his fingers. But France made him later in his life. He was born to a Polish mother and French father which later made him a “French” because he spent his later life in France etc. It doesn’t matter. What matters is that he was an-omnipotent composer who died too early. Imagine if he composed more?
I don't understand why there are over 17k dislikes there..... To me chopin isn;t any more an ordinary person, his soul turned into music. To play his pieces well is one of my life goal.
I play piano and have been trying modern composers like Einaudi, but Chopin is the greatest of all and will never be surpassed. I can endlessly listen to his Nocturnes, followed be his Preludes, followed by everything else he ever wrote :)
Every time we listen to Chopin, we seem to hear and discover something new among the notes - we wonder if that's how you feel too? 😊 by the way, if you're looking for modern composers with a Chopin influence, we definitely recommend Luke Faulkner! He even wrote a "Hommage à Chopin". You can stream it on Spotify: open.spotify.com/album/6FPZOmLPOa8jtgNIGnRV45?si=C_HkTiiKTQGtXxo3AtLF8Q. If you have time to check it out, we would love to hear your thoughts!
@@HALIDONMUSIC Thank you so much for sharing that link, he seems to have captured Chopin's essence in a new, very interesting way. I feel he has great potential to create something truly unique and interesting in the future! My only criticism is the dynamics of the piece (a bit too loud sometimes). I'm not sure if Mr. Faulkner is a friend of yours, but I sense greatness from what I heard. If you're reading this Luke, keep at it! Honestly, it doesn't matter what critiques I have as the piece is still brilliant, and I am just a random on the internet, just giving my 2 cents as a long time musician (you are leagues above me so please don't take this the wrong way 😊 )
I'm from South Africa, and I totally love Chopin's work. the first piece of Chopin l knew was the Nocturne No.1 in Bb minor Op.9, and it became the very first piano song i actually learnt to play... Chopin was a genius.
its hard to explain but when i listen to instrumental music it unearths my own emotions, rather than lyrical music where i have to listen to other people's problems. instrumental is more adaptable and becomes more.. personalised. anyone get me?
Yea, that makes sense. In songs with lyrics, the lyrics pretty much steer you towards certain emotions or thoughts...Classical is more abstract. Aside from the song's tempo and notes being played, they're usually not "about" anything, so it's more open to your own interpretation.
I feel the same, I use to listen to hiphop, rap a lot but I feel like it just bring my thoughts to certain places, not to mention nowadays the lyrics of those songs are bit.... Too much? So it brings to me to stop listening those but classical ones like Schubert & Chopin, etc. I still like hiphop & rap because those are good beats when you step on the dance floor
I know I'm late to the discussion but I want to voice my opinion on the matter. I love instrumental songs. The music I prefer the most is pure techno with minimal to no lyrics.. I can relate it to any kind of mood I have : Angry, happy, sad, etc.. I appreciate classical, but for different occasions : work, peacefull state of mind. This to say that I agree with you, instrumental music is superior from the fact that you set the mood you want to have. Not to say you can't do that with lyrical music, but it's easier with instrumental.
@Mario Vinicius The more national, the more international - this is a kind of paradox :) PS. No words can describe how much we Poles love our Fryderyk ❤
@@jamespatagueule9013 poland has so little to show for that they must be extra proud of one half-pole ^^. chopin was rather french than polish though, lived most of his life in france etc.
My friends always look at me weird when I say I listen to classical music, but this sound, it's truly beautiful. it helps me sleep and I have it playing when I'm drawing, I love it so much.
Nerd Monstar I agree totally. Each to their own. That being said, I'm reminded of one of the worst insults in the Russian language: "nekulturny". To call someone "uncultured" is to call them worse than a dog. Anywhere in Russia, that epithet will get you a clip upside your earhole. If not worse.
i think is the most complete of all the instruments every single instrument have a wonderful sound if you know how to play it... but i repeat.. is MY OPINION greddings ! :3
I', Polish, and a teacher of Geography in the UK secondary school. I play Chopin in my lessons when students work independently. They are calm, focused and the atmosphere changes with first notes... everytime.
100 years later, Justin Bieber will be long forgotten, but Chopin's music will still be around. Actually it's criminal to even compare that little brat with the maestro.
+Thousand Sunny 100 years from now it will be remembered as a tragedy and a federal crime, committed as an act of treason after she realized that no country actually wanted her.
+Thousand Sunny Oh don't be so judgmental, it's not like he's polluting the airwaves and infecting people with cancer, let the kids who like his music have the freedom to do just that.
Chopin Chopin Chopin ! Who can't love his music ??!! His unic style, it doesn't juste make us smile but feel so good, suddently we're in another world, just us and his music.. so magic, amazing, beautiful, chopin ! ^^
His Mother was playing piano when expecting a baby and then after Fryderyk was born she used to play piano with little Fritz on her lap... all this in a little Family House in Zelazova Vola near Warsaw/Poland :-)
MoogOn! I just finally got my answer! I just asked my husband, after I listened to Tristesse ........is this song sad to you? He said yes, it's a little sad.............and I answered Yes, see? Every time I hear it I want to cry! And did you know he wrote his first composition when he was 8 years old? Polonaise in G Minor - Pull it up and listen to it! :)
Nasz kochany polski brylant. Jak to miło gdy tylu obcokrajowców, tylu cudzoziemców wyraża takie na wskroś przebijające sympatią opinie o Naszym wspaniałym rodaku Fryderyku. Może jakiś Polak też podziela moją opinię...... zatem "łapka w górę"w mój komentarz :)
Fryderyk Franciszek Chopin (1810-1849) was a Polish composer and virtuoso pianist. Chopin was born in Żelazowa Wola, a village near Warsaw in Poland. His mother was Polish, and his father was a French immigrant to Poland (he was very young, 16 years old, when he went to Poland to the farm where he worked. He became an ardent Polish patriot. Most of his life, until the death spent in Poland). Fryderyk Chopin was raised in a Polish home as a Pole. His native language was Polish. Chopin grew up in Warsaw and completed his musical education there. Following the Russian suppression of the Polish November 1830 Uprising, he settled in Paris as part of the Polish Great Emigration and never returned to his homeland. The vast majority of Chopin's works are for solo piano, though he also wrote two piano concertos, a few chamber pieces and some songs to Polish texts. Chopin used to compose music inspired by Polish national tunes, he composed Revolutionary Etude after Polish failed revolution against Russia in 1831. Chopin's music is Polish not only because he composed polonaises and mazurkas (traditional Polish dances), but because it grows out of Polish speech and Polish emotionality, as much as Rachmaninov sounds Russian and Gershwin and Copland sound American. Chopin's last will was to bury his heart in Warsaw... Urn with Chopin's heart was immured in a pillar of The Church of the Holy Cross in Warsaw. "Varsovian by birth, a Pole at heart, and through his talent a citizen of the world" - C.K.Norwid about Fryderyk Chopin. Norwid was a writer and Chopin's friend. Best regards from Poland.
I’ve been listening to this to do homework for at least 5-6 years and I wish I would’ve commented on this video back in high school! Hi future self, I’m sure you’ll be reading this in the next 5 years.
I'm a 16 year old boy who likes classical but is native to mexico, daim, but I like the songs because I can feel them, and I can see a story when I listen to his songs. It's very impressive, something that pop and rap doesn't have, something I've never experienced somewhere else
Dear Osler, isn't it great when you come upon something that just touches your heart like that? The beauty allows us to touch a higher level of spirituality. I'm glad you are so interested in music, Osler. There is much that is so sublime, it brings a happy tear to even tough guys' eyes. I also enjoy your native country's music, and I'm from Vienna. There is a whole world out there for you to explore! Wonderful music! It will also help us all to be strong during these difficult times. Classical music also helps calm animals (if not supersonically loud), and plants thrive, too! BLESSINGS TO ALL!
Listening classical music is a healing for many people including myself. Classic music make me chill and it takes me to another world. Really there is history in the music and every composer wrote different histories through through their songs. I love classic music.
At 16 i was like you. It's rare a thing to see a 16 year old understand and feel like music like this these days. You might have a very special brain make sure you take advantage of it.
Chopin is easily my favourite composer in totality. There are many who I like and admire but I rarely like everything or nearly all of their work ... Chopin on the other hand ...
Ravel and Debussy might be my favorite composers for individual pieces such as their string quartets, but I've never heard a dull piece of music by Chopin and I think I've heard more of his work than anyone else's, possibly (more than the prolific Mozart or Beethoven, perhaps!).
You are all arguing over different personalities and compositions. Each of these men that are debated over as the best classical composer is like the argument of whether cats or dogs are better. Different people appreciate different styles. Yes they may be of the same genre, but the men listed in the comments have very different personalities and composition styles. Scholars study for years on just one personality and never get to the ends of who is better because they are all too different. That's my two cents.
Mozart was and still is my favorite for a few songs that really are like magic. Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata is a magical song. But I remember Chopin being the only Classical artist who had a touch of magic in almost every song. Unlike Mozart and Beethoven, Chopin was almost always good. To this day it's rare for a composer to be almost always that good. Chopin should be way more famous in my opinion. He is famous, but to the general public he's probably unheard of.
I would disagree slightly my friend! The music of Chopin no doubt is excellence, or sublime, as i appreciate it so much. But to me, as a Piano lover, and teacher of the same. I would go with Liszt! Liszt is the best, in my opinion, because of the Mephisto waltz, and the Hungarian Rhapsodies. One must admit, that the music of both these geniuses would be some what similar in skill level. But i would still go with Liszt, who was a Casanova of the romantic era, but gave up leisure life to become a priest.
I've never listened to Liszt before. From what little I've heard so far, he has a very flowing style. He's undoubtedly highly skilled. He's also has moments of romantic magic. I'm not very familiar with classical music, so I'll definitely add Liszt to my playlist being that of what little I know he seems exceptional.
Shylo Vilecoscious Chopin has much more emotional and powerful songs such as his funeral march and "tristesse", while Liszt had songs that were just straight up awesome, such as his El Contrabandista and Hungarian Rhapsody.
BrocookiesTRB Try Mozart's String Quartet 15 in D minor K.421 all movements. I love all four movements, but a certain part of the fourth movement is my favorite. I remember there being a fifth movement. But for some reason it's only known for having four movements. I'll have to check that later. But yes. First thing I noticed about Liszt is his strength and skill. Whereas Chopin plays with harmony of notes more.
Mam 30 lat,wiem kim jest Chopin od podstawówki, a dopiero teraz słucham Go na powaznie, bez przerwy. Mam żal do siebie,że tyle lat żyłem w nieświadomości. Teraz wiem gdzie szukać MUZYKI
It will get better. Don 't blame yourself. Do something that maker you beter as yesterday strijd on for progression no matter age or state of mind. Love me. You. Us. We.
In that music you can hear that their desire (not only Chopin's but all Polish great migrants in XIX age like musicians, writers, painters etc.) to live in their own free country, that they never had (they were born while there was no Poland on the political map). As a Pole I was teached all the culture of that period of our history, and it is amazing that I've noticed that there were 3 countries that wanted to depolonizate us, and the result of 123 years of being out of political map is only the extreme bloom of polish culture. I'd like to also notice that in Chopin's music I think, that I can hear his desire of free Poland, that he have never experienced. For me this will always be something bigger, above the understanding of the people from always-free countries.
Just imagine sitting in a theater hearing this and thinking you will probably never hear it again. You get to listen this one time and then it lives on in your mind. Living in this time would have been hard
"All art is a gift of the Holy Spirit. When this light shines through the mind of a musician, it manifests itself in beautiful harmonies." ~ Baha'i Quotation
just think about all the wonderful things that remain there yet undiscovered, or those things that we are never going to see because they are now lost in history. :0
How can 2 thousand people unlike this???!!! I can understand someone who does not like to listen to classical music, but not someone who click unlike!!!
A Varsovian by birth, a Pole in his heart and with his talent, and a citizen of the world. Rodem Warszawianin, sercem Polak, a talentem świata obywatel.
The COMPLETE Chopin Nocturnes are now available here 👉 th-cam.com/video/IVpuTD-2SEo/w-d-xo.html
You who made this possible! A million times THANK YOU ❤️
Hey beautiful
Thanks 😊
Amo.Amo.Amo. CHOPIN
@@Jhadar GC sogfshv
Yy
time stamps:
Douze Etudes Op. 25: No. 1 "Aeolian Harp" (00:00)
Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1 (02:27)
Nocturne in F# major Op. 15 No. 2 (07:44)
Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1 wait again?(11:08)
Nocturne in B major Op. 32 No. 1 (16:33)
Nocturne in C minor Op. 48 No. 1 (20:30)
Nocturne Op. posth. No. 20 in C sharp Minor (25:06)
Nocturne in D-flat major Op. 27 No. 2 (29:04)
Nocturne in E-flat major Op. 9 No. 2 (33:35)
Nocturne in E minor Op. 72 No. 1 (38:18)
Nocturne in F# major Op. 15 No. 2 (41:43)
Nocturne in F# minor Op. 48 No. 2 (44:27)
Nocturne in G minor Op. 15 No. 3 (49:10)
Prelude in E minor Op. 28 No. 4 (53:50)
Prelude in D-flat major Op. 28 No. 15 "Raindrop" (55:54)
Prelude in A major Op. 28 No. 7 (1:01:29)
Polonaise in A-flat major, Op. 53 "Heroic Polonaise" (1:02:27)
Polonaise in C sharp minor Op. 26 No. 1 (1:10:38)
Prelude in E-flat minor Op. 28 No. 14 (1:17:19)
Prelude in A-flat major Op. 28 No. 17 (1:19:03)
Prelude in F minor Op. 28 No 18 (1:20:17)
Prelude in G major Op. 28 No. 3 (1:21:05)
Prelude in B minor Op. 28 No. 6 (1:22:07)
Prelude in F# minor Op. 28 No. 8 (1:24:14)
Waltz in F minor Op. 70 No. 2 (1:26:10)
Waltz in A minor Op. 34 No. 2 (1:33:06)
Waltz in D-flat major Op. 64 No. 1 “Minute Waltz” (1:34:35)
Grande Valse Brillante Op. 18 (1:36:20)
Waltz in A Flat major, Op. 69 No. 1 (1:38:22)
Qi Zhou thanks!
I am responding with computer, but either way, thank you!
Thank you!
Incredible
And this whole life I think there is only one Nocturne lol.
Douze Etudes Op. 25: No. 1 "Aeolian Harp" (00:00)
Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1 (02:27)
Nocturne in F# major Op. 15 No. 2 (07:44)
Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1 (11:08)
Nocturne in B major Op. 32 No. 1 (16:33)
Nocturne in C minor Op. 48 No. 1 (20:30)
Nocturne Op. posth. No. 20 in C sharp Minor (25:06)
Nocturne in D-flat major Op. 27 No. 2 (29:02)
Nocturne in E-flat major Op. 9 No. 2 (33:35)
Nocturne in E minor Op. 72 No. 1 (38:18)
Nocturne in F# minor Op. 15 No. 2 (41:43)
Nocturne in F# minor Op. 48 No. 2 (44:27)
Nocturne in G minor Op. 15 No. 3 (50:59)
Prelude in E minor Op. 28 No. 4 (55:33)
Prelude in D-flat major Op. 28 No. 15 "Raindrop" (57:09)
Prelude in A major Op. 28 No. 7 (1:03:14)
Polonaise in A-flat major, Op. 53 "Heroic Polonaise" (1:04:11)
Polonaise in C sharp minor Op. 26 No. 1 (1:10:38)
Prelude in E-flat minor Op. 28 No. 14 (1:18:29)
Prelude in A-flat major Op. 28 No. 17 (1:19:03)
Prelude in F minor Op. 28 No 18 (1:22:02)
Prelude in G major Op. 28 No. 3 (1:22:50)
Prelude in B minor Op. 28 No. 6 (1:23:52)
Prelude in F# minor Op. 28 No. 8 (1:26:00)
Scherzo No. 2 Op. 31 (1:27:50)
Waltz in F minor Op. 70 No. 2 (1:37:49)
Waltz in A minor Op. 34 No. 2 (1:40:47)
Waltz in D-flat major Op. 64 No. 1 “Minute Waltz” (1:46:15)
Grande Valse Brillante Op. 18 (1:48:00)
Waltz in A Flat major, Op. 69 No. 1 (1:50:05) txs for all the likes!
Thanks!
Muchas Gracias!!
gracias
Thanketh thee!
You’re a hero
I have been using this Chopin music to study for over a decade now. First as an undergraduate, then for my masters, then for med school, then during residency. Chopin has been there every step of the way.
We love how Chopin has been the most loyal and reliable study companion for you, that's amazing! Also, huge congrats on your career!
Thank you for saying.
This clip as a compilation I’ve been listening to for over a decade. I hope you’re finding the same peace in his music as I do. Continuously.
Thank you to the guys who posted it in the first place.
Parabéns pelo bom gosto!
Still waiting for Chopin to release his next album...
Rui Parreira his work? Yeah. That's why it's free. It can either cost infinity or be free.
no, no, they redistributed his talents to more deserving class
You will be waiting for a while.
until I'm next in line for hea... nothing.
Andrew Gunner he's so underground now that he released his next album as a pdf file
Thank you Chopin for making homework a little less painful.
Th3DoM1naToR indeed
Th3DoM1naToR thank you cube , snoop and dub c for making homework rock with me ;O kiddin , nice music
Juan Sebastian yea i do my homework and..? smth wrong?
Th3DoM1naToR and Work a little less painful :P
Th3DoM1naToR haha, me too. Classicall music when homework, no distraction, ease my head, feeling good...
"Varsovian by birth, a Pole at heart, and through his talent a citizen of the world" - C.K.Norwid about Fryderyk Chopin (Norwid was a writer and Chopin's friend). Best regards from Poland.
+Glov00 yea Poland is a nation with lot of very talented people. Skłodowka Curie, Mickiewicz, Chopin. It's very beutiful country
+Glov00 since I went to Poland and saw this remarkable country I understand Chopin's melancholy so much better. Chopin and Poland - pure magic
Krzystof Krawczyk I could not agree with you more. For me it was "love on first sight". I am glad and proud to be of Polish ancestry
my friend chopin is a french guy ; his father was french... that is a fact Er ist Franzose :-)
Для меня абсолютно ясно, что Шопен посланник Высших Миров, и совершенно необоснованна претензия втиснуть его в рамки двух -трех национальностей.
Our generation is very lucky to have opportunity to listen to these masterpieces whenever we want!
This is a very underrated comment.
indeed
Compartir y leer los comentarios de tanta gente de distintos países. Porque es universal y atemporal, ya es para toda la eternidad.
I agree with you...UK@@angelinamoldes6233
I see people's comments on their pride to be polish, but man, listening to Chopin makes me proud to be human!
You are right 😀
Too bad you're not Polish though.
@@patrykrokosz1112 I'm sorry to bring it to you, but did you know, I bet you didn't, that all humanity has it's origin in the deep, deep heart of africa?
Think before you talk :)
@@patrykrokosz1112 Well, I haven't accused you of anything. It's just an imprudent statement of yours.
@@patrykrokosz1112 You didn't hurt my feelings... Boy, how old are you? Nevermind, I don't care. Good night :)
I’ve just been in Poland and fell in love with the country but mostly with Chopin and the beautiful park at Lazenski where you can hear the most beautiful Chopin music performed right beneath his monument. Breathtaking place and of course the mesmerizing music. I just keep coming back to his music ever since.
Hi Hyewon, thanks so much for your lovely comment! Have you got a favorite piece by Chopin? If so, let us know :)
I love Lazienki
They Poland also incorporated/invented the "heliocentric theory " which many in their right minds still believe in today, no?
^ już myślałem, że nie znajdę jakiegoś zakompleksionego polaka XD
@@drgus8042 szukałeś ze świecą, aż znalazłeś- jest was dwóch, Ty i Twoje lustrzane odbicie 🤯
"Simplicity is the final achievement. After one has played a vast quantity of notes and more notes, it is simplicity that emerges as the crowning reward of art". Frédéric Chopin❤️
I’m polish, and I’m proud we had and still have, coz his music still alive, musician like Chopin😌his music never forgotten🙏I’m cryin Iistening this magician partitures, polonaises and etudees 🥺god bless you good people🙋♂️
“Bach is an astronomer, discovering the most marvelous stars. Beethoven challenges the universe. I only try to express the soul and the heart of man.” - Chopin
Did he really say that? I mean, I could go look it up, but I want to hear what you have to say.
@@donnabrockable yup. He did
Wow
Grigory Sokolov and Brigitte Engerer do an excellent job drawing that 'heart' out of Chopin pieces.
Chopin is my best classic music musicane
I find it fascinating that everyone plays Chopin differently. I don't think there's another composer whose music has so much texturing, intimacy, delicacy, and expressiveness arranged in such a way that it is is not possible for any player to keep their inner self hidden. So revealing, so revelatory.
Your description is on point!!
so tru
So beautifully said...thank you.
TRUE
you need a pizza and a movie, phony!
Chopin died in 1849 but his music is alive ! He was a genius and remains my favorite composer. His Noctures , in particular Nocturne 1 , with their melancholy and extreme sensitivity bring tears to my eyes each time . Chopin was a piano teacher and I can only imagine having a teacher like him , what a dream it would be 💗
I find, contrary to the very talented modern composers, Chopin's music is sad but at the same time, uplifting. Can't get enough.
Love the formality, who else goes English when listening to piano?
I mean... a teacher of this caliber with his level of output, I'd be surprised if he would be the chill guy you speak of when it came to playing the piano, I wouldn't be surprised if he was harsh with his students.
💯✌
@@christine6014 You probably know why his music is sad. Chopin's longing for Poland and his family. Homeland, his countrymen were under a Russian tyranny. Hence his melancholy. Cheers!
Looks like we're getting older, but Chopin's masterpieces will never fade away 👑
Jamás
This playlist is kind special for me. It helped me writing my graduation final paper. It was really hard and sometimes I was very tired, but listening to Chopin was the best medicine.
Thanks dearest Chopin for having made me entirely happy since my adolescence
! you know I fell in love with you!!! and you personally helped me in that examen!! but
I passed successfully but...did not become a concertist but a writer!...just to tell about
you...your life...your love!!! Thanks...my love....!!!!!
+adela ferrero That's an interersting comment, what kind of things do you write, im guessing you mean musical writings?
+adela ferrero fucing hell are you one of those bollox romance novelist nuters that considers themselves a writer, your a fuck wit beyond belif ! that comment was cheesy and for a writer, well !
mcpartridgeboy Wow..what did she ever do to you? God be with you man; you need peace.
louis santiago god ? wow you a fucing god nut then ?
No buddy, there is no need to be a God nut, life is about finding a balance in the things you do. What i meant to say with that comment was that you sound like an unhappy person, you were insulting a woman that has done nothing to you, and you think it's ok to do so because you hide behind the computer screen, and your ways tell me you are a coward and a lost man..you take care of your self, hope it gets better for ya.
If you ever feel like there's no beauty in the world, just listen to Chopin.....from Fort Worth, Texas
Pozdrawiamy Texas z Polski 👍
Actually, I listen to classical music how I'm feel bad or tired myself, it's helpful! I'm looking on ugly stuff around and starting to think about art... And it's great, what even in Texas exist people with soul...
Asi es....
И это правда
0:00:00 Étude No. 13 in A flat major “Aeolian Harp”, Op. 25/1
0:02:27 Nocturne No. 1 in B flat minor, Op. 9/1
0:07:45 Nocturne No. 5 in F sharp major, Op. 15/2
0:11:09 Nocturne No. 1 in B flat minor, Op. 9/1 (Reprise)
0:16:34 Nocturne No. 9 in B major, Op. 32/1
0:20:31 Nocturne No. 13 in C minor, Op. 48/1
0:25:06 Nocturne No. 20 in C sharp minor, B. 49
0:29:05 Nocturne No. 8 in D flat major, Op. 27/2
0:33:37 Nocturne No. 2 in E flat major, Op. 9/2
0:38:24 Nocturne No. 5 in F sharp major, Op. 15/2 (Reprise)
0:41:09 Nocturne No. 14 in F sharp minor, Op. 48/2 (Broken)
0:45:54 Nocturne No. 6 in G minor, Op. 15/3
0:50:30 Prélude No. 4 in E minor, Op. 28/4
0:52:35 Prélude No. 15 in D flat major “Raindrop”, Op. 28/15
0:58:10 Prélude No. 7 in A major, Op. 28/7
0:59:08 Polonaise No. 6 in A flat major “Polonaise héroïque”, Op. 53
1:05:35 Polonaise No. 1 in C sharp minor, Op. 26/1
1:13:26 Prélude No. 14 in E flat minor, Op. 28/14
1:14:00 Prélude No. 17 in A flat major, Op. 28/17
1:16:58 Prélude No. 18 in F minor, Op. 28/18
1:17:45 Prélude No. 3 in G major, Op. 28/3
1:18:48 Prélude No. 6 in B minor, Op. 28/6
1:20:55 Prélude No. 8 in F sharp minor, Op, 28/8
1:22:46 Scherzo No. 2 in B flat minor, Op. 31
1:32:45 Waltz No. 12 in F minor, Op. posth. 70/2
1:35:43 Waltz No. 3 in A minor, Op. 34/2
1:41:11 Waltz No. 6 in D flat major “Minute Waltz”, Op. 64/1
1:42:56 Waltz No. 1 in E flat major “Grande valse brillante”, Op. 18
1:45:00 Waltz No. 9 in A flat major “L'adieu”, Op. 69/1
“These are actually correct version.”
“These are actually correct version.”
“These are actually correct version.”
OP should pin this or add the timeframes on the description
@@dersonveloso Exactly!!!
@@dersonveloso Do you mean OP was “Original Poster”?
@@telllmeewhyy Yes, "OP" stands for "Original Poster".
Thank you
Chopin est, pour moi, l'un des plus grands de ce monde !
Loann Dutois He wasn't that tall,jk.
+TheRed SnakeQc Laughing at your own wit, Snake?
vincoff1 Hmm? Do you even understand french? It was a word game in french,you seem to be dim witted.
***** Je vais très bien, merci :p
+Nicolai Greene Harvard grad thanks
Seeing that this video has 34+ million view makes my heart happy... somehow i don't feel like i live in world full of idiots. Thank you!
Yeah....and see in wonderfull comments and people being nice to each other is very warming =^)
+Nick Lopez same ^^
+Nick Lopez Sadly, idiots listen to this as well...
+Johann Noriega "You don't listen to Chopin ? Mediocre, you won't go to Valhalla". That's not exactly what I would call nice.
+Bob Malooga hahaha!!!
01) - 0:00:00 - Douze Etudes Op. 25: No. 1 "Aeolian Harp"
02) - 0:02:27 - Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1
03) - 0:07:44 - Nocturne in F# major Op. 15 No. 2
04) - 0:11:08 - Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1
05) - 0:16:33 - Nocturne in B major Op. 32 No. 1
06) - 0:20:30 - Nocturne in C minor Op. 48 No. 1
07) - 0:25:06 - Nocturne Op. posth. No. 20 in C sharp Minor
08) - 0:29:02 - Nocturne in D-flat major Op. 27 No. 2
09) - 0:33:35 - Nocturne in E-flat major Op. 9 No. 2
10) - 0:38:18 - Nocturne in E minor Op. 72 No. 1
11) - 0:41:43 - Nocturne in F# minor Op. 15 No. 2
12) - 0:44:27 - Nocturne in F# minor Op. 48 No. 2
13) - 0:50:59 - Nocturne in G minor Op. 15 No. 3
14) - 0:55:33 - Prelude in E minor Op. 28 No. 4
15) - 0:57:39 - Prelude in D-flat major Op. 28 No. 15 "Raindrop"
16) - 1:03:14 - Prelude in A major Op. 28 No. 7
17) - 1:04:11 - Polonaise in A-flat major, Op. 53 "Heroic Polonaise"
18) - 1:10:38 - Polonaise in C sharp minor Op. 26 No. 1
19) - 1:18:29 - Prelude in E-flat minor Op. 28 No. 14
20) - 1:19:03 - Prelude in A-flat major Op. 28 No. 17
21) - 1:22:02 - Prelude in F minor Op. 28 No 18
22) - 1:22:50 - Prelude in G major Op. 28 No. 3
23) - 1:23:52 - Prelude in B minor Op. 28 No. 6
24) - 1:26:00 - Prelude in F# minor Op. 28 No. 8
25) - 1:27:50 - Scherzo No. 2 Op. 31
26) - 1:37:49 - Waltz in F minor Op. 70 No. 2
27) - 1:40:47 - Waltz in A minor Op. 34 No. 2
28) - 1:46:15 - Waltz in D-flat major Op. 64 No. 1 “Minute Waltz”
29) - 1:48:00 - Grande Valse Brillante Op. 18
30) - 1:50:05 - Waltz in A Flat major, Op. 69 No. 1
Faith In His Blood . Org thanks :)
Welcome!
thank you so much
Welcome!
They had it in the description xD
Buenos días , mi amigo Chopin gracias por la valiosa música que nos deja con gran orgullo se siente Paz interior en nuestro corazón un abrazo amigo dónde quieras q estés gracias
This summer I've been in Poland, and there I read a sentence which was taken from the "Revue et Gazette Musicale de Paris" in 1838. This sentence was more or less like this "When asked who is the first pianist in the world: Liszt or Thalberg, there is only one answer: Chopin".
Simply marvelous.
Chopin ti fa entrare in un mondo affascinante
@@emiliasanthia241 Concordo pienamente!
Who is the pianist plying? Strepitoso, altro che rubinstein
2019, the World still need Chopin.
More than ever.
yes
Check out alejandro aranda @scarypoolparty
I didn’t know he existed....
I agree. Him and Debussy
Deubeul Seveun the world needs less hate that could happen if we wanted to but we are irrational war machines
As a child my Mom would play Chopin on the piano, I would settle down on the floor and fall asleep listening to this fantastic music. Thank you Mom and thank you Chopin. Gifts of the Living God!
Richard Yescas sounds beautiful
Richard Yescas
Bravo!!
You were one lucky boy!
You were privileged for that! ;)
Me to but now I am trying to find my favorite she played.
The man who writes poetry with the piano.
Yep.
@@prisonerohope6970
❤
❤❤❤
MADINA ZELSIN
modern day music can be very good in my opinion.....But classical music has everything! It can bring you on a journey, but it can also make you awe and wonder...and quiet for a moment. It has no lyrics to tell the story....it just gently pushes you in a certain direction so your mind can figure out the rest. and when that happens....it grips your soul. Thank you Chopin for your gifts to the world :)
Oh my... Never have read such a perfect description of these feelings.
@@noneofyourbusinesslove1445 thank you
Yess that’s exactly how I feel. It takes me somewhere else. It’s amazing. That’s how I try to explain it to people. You did a remarkable job at detailing your experience with this piece
I also find that it is the only type of music that can make you cry in an instant, as soon as the first notes are played
most of mordern is very bad though
All of a sudden, I started feeling something in my chest while listening to this. Now I really want to cry and I don't even know why.
Guess that's the power of music, it reveals your deepest feelings.
Thanks man didn’t know you people still vibin to my music 180 years later
time stamps:
Douze Etudes Op. 25: No. 1 "Aeolian Harp" (00:00)
Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1 (02:27)
Nocturne in F# major Op. 15 No. 2 (07:44)
Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1 wait again?(11:08)
Nocturne in B major Op. 32 No. 1 (16:33)
Nocturne in C minor Op. 48 No. 1 (20:30)
Nocturne Op. posth. No. 20 in C sharp Minor (25:06)
Nocturne in D-flat major Op. 27 No. 2 (29:04)
Nocturne in E-flat major Op. 9 No. 2 (33:35)
Nocturne in E minor Op. 72 No. 1 (38:18)
Nocturne in F# major Op. 15 No. 2 (41:43)
Nocturne in F# minor Op. 48 No. 2 (44:27)
Nocturne in G minor Op. 15 No. 3 (49:10)
Prelude in E minor Op. 28 No. 4 (53:50)
Prelude in D-flat major Op. 28 No. 15 "Raindrop" (55:54)
Prelude in A major Op. 28 No. 7 (1:01:29)
Polonaise in A-flat major, Op. 53 "Heroic Polonaise" (1:02:27)
Polonaise in C sharp minor Op. 26 No. 1 (1:10:38)
Prelude in E-flat minor Op. 28 No. 14 (1:17:19)
Prelude in A-flat major Op. 28 No. 17 (1:19:03)
Prelude in F minor Op. 28 No 18 (1:20:17)
Prelude in G major Op. 28 No. 3 (1:21:05)
Prelude in B minor Op. 28 No. 6 (1:22:07)
Prelude in F# minor Op. 28 No. 8 (1:24:14)
Waltz in F minor Op. 70 No. 2 (1:26:10)
Waltz in A minor Op. 34 No. 2 (1:33:06)
Waltz in D-flat major Op. 64 No. 1 “Minute Waltz” (1:34:35)
Grande Valse Brillante Op. 18 (1:36:20)
Waltz in A Flat major, Op. 69 No. 1 (1:38:22)
Senti a mesma coisa
You can hear the breathing of the Pianist and It just makes It better .
OMG.
+Ogi Chan you should listen to some Glen Gould then in his Goldberg Variations. Its all heavy panting but great.
+Gabo Prado You know that you can get reported for self promoting? I really dislike reporting people so please don't self promote.
I don't know who are you? But I delete it my "promotion"
As you said anyway I seen your profile and you have nothing
You're just a jealous person
Maybe a frustrated musician? ??
The most beautiful music in the world! Iam proud that it was our compatriot who composed such wonderful masterpieces ....I always shed a tear with this music ...
5 million views. It makes me happy that there are still people who like something outside of pop music
Oh yes! I search it out!! 42 yo female from the Midwest- teaching my kids about it all!!! ❤❤❤❤
So sad that this great composer (if not the greatest) lived for only 39 years. If he had lived longer, he probably would have given us more masterpieces.
Hi bimmer, you're so right! That's such a pity!
Great people have shorter life
Well, la naturaleza nunca se equivoca, antes pensaba asi, pero parece voy pa los 100
He wasn't that far removed from the recording age either. Perhaps we might have even gotten the chance to hear the man himself play his music.
He’s still alive, through his music
"Mozart, Beethoven and Chopin never died. They just became Music."
POLKA WILL NEVER DIE!
And so beautiful as souls to written to it!
Missed bach
The dumbest quote ever though.
Am not a big classic buff and Even rarely hear it but it is so true they Will never die...
listen to Chopin leaves me back as a better person, thinking more positively about others and the world. Big respect to Pianists who are able to play it.
You said it beautifully. His music is so positively charged.
THE BEST OF CHOPIN | TRACKLIST
1. Douze Etudes Op. 25: No. 1 "Aeolian Harp" (00:00)
2. Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1 (02:27)
3. Nocturne in F# major Op. 15 No. 2 (07:44)
4. Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1 (11:08)
5. Nocturne in B major Op. 32 No. 1 (16:33)
6. Nocturne in C minor Op. 48 No. 1 (20:30)
7. Nocturne Op. posth. No. 20 in C sharp Minor (25:06)
8. Nocturne in D-flat major Op. 27 No. 2 (29:02)
9. Nocturne in E-flat major Op. 9 No. 2 (33:35)
10. Nocturne in E minor Op. 72 No. 1 (38:18)
11. Nocturne in F# minor Op. 15 No. 2 (41:43)
12. Nocturne in F# minor Op. 48 No. 2 (44:27)
13. Nocturne in G minor Op. 15 No. 3 (50:59)
14. Prelude in E minor Op. 28 No. 4 (55:33)
15. Prelude in D-flat major Op. 28 No. 15 "Raindrop" (57:39)
16. Prelude in A major Op. 28 No. 7 (1:03:14)
17. Polonaise in A-flat major, Op. 53 "Heroic Polonaise" (1:04:11)
18. Polonaise in C sharp minor Op. 26 No. 1 (1:10:38)
19. Prelude in E-flat minor Op. 28 No. 14 (1:18:29)
20. Prelude in A-flat major Op. 28 No. 17 (1:19:03)
21. Prelude in F minor Op. 28 No 18 (1:22:02)
22. Prelude in G major Op. 28 No. 3 (1:22:50)
23. Prelude in B minor Op. 28 No. 6 (1:23:52)
24. Prelude in F# minor Op. 28 No. 8 (1:26:00)
25. Scherzo No. 2 Op. 31 (1:27:50)
26. Waltz in F minor Op. 70 No. 2 (1:37:49)
27. Waltz in A minor Op. 34 No. 2 (1:40:47)
28. Waltz in D-flat major Op. 64 No. 1 “Minute Waltz” (1:46:15)
29. Grande Valse Brillante Op. 18 (1:48:00)
30. Waltz in A Flat major, Op. 69 No. 1 (1:50:05)
2 and 4 are the same?
the best ones are minute waltz and raindrop
Nice job copying the description
Thank you
You are a angel ?
00:00 Douze Etudes Op. 25: No. 1 "Aeolian Harp"
02:27 Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1
07:44 Nocturne in F# major Op. 15 No. 2
11:08 Nocturne in B-flat minor Op. 9 No. 1
16:33 Nocturne in B major Op. 32 No. 1
20:30 Nocturne in C minor Op. 48 No. 1
25:06 Nocturne Op. posth. No. 20 in C sharp Minor
29:02 Nocturne in D-flat major Op. 27 No. 2
33:35 Nocturne in E-flat major Op. 9 No. 2
38:18 Nocturne in E minor Op. 72 No. 1
41:43 Nocturne in F# minor Op. 15 No. 2
44:27 Nocturne in F# minor Op. 48 No. 2
50:59 Nocturne in G minor Op. 15 No. 3
55:33 Prelude in E minor Op. 28 No. 4
57:39 Prelude in D-flat major Op. 28 No. 15 "Raindrop"
1:03:14 Prelude in A major Op. 28 No. 7
1:04:11 Polonaise in A-flat major, Op. 53 "Heroic Polonaise"
1:10:38 Polonaise in C sharp minor Op. 26 No. 1
1:18:29 Prelude in E-flat minor Op. 28 No. 14
1:19:03 Prelude in A-flat major Op. 28 No. 17
1:22:02 Prelude in F minor Op. 28 No 18
1:22:50 Prelude in G major Op. 28 No. 3
1:23:52 Prelude in B minor Op. 28 No. 6
1:26:00 Prelude in F# minor Op. 28 No. 8
1:27:50 Scherzo No. 2 Op. 31
1:37:49 Waltz in F minor Op. 70 No. 2
1:40:47 Waltz in A minor Op. 34 No. 2
1:46:15 Waltz in D-flat major Op. 64 No. 1 “Minute Waltz”
1:48:00 Grande Valse Brillante Op. 18
1:50:05 Waltz in A Flat major, Op. 69 No. 1
Thats a long coment yo #lol
Wwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwaaaaaaaaaaaaattttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttttt????
the second and the fourth are the same ?
@@alixii794 yes
Thank you!
Chopin, a real fighter and patriot for his home land Poland.His passion for his home land was his main source of inspiration.From the age of 5 Chopin was the musician that marked me and make me love music.Chopin love from Greece you will live forever in our hearts!
@macho mann randy savage One day all people that did murderers and genocides will pay what they done.The world never forgets!
@@kostasthanos4440 they have already begun to pay. don't worry.
@@kostasthanos4440 You are real Spartan warrior my friend. All the best from Poland.
@@rl9le5and9wski3 Thank you polish brother god bless you 🇬🇷🇵🇱🇵🇱🇬🇷
Η ΕΛΛΑΔΑ ΘΑ ΥΠΟΣΤΗΡΙΖΕΙ ΠΑΝΤΑ ΚΑΙ ΓΙΑ ΠΑΝΤΑ ΤΗΝ ΠΟΙΟΤΙΚΗ ΜΟΥΣΙΚΗ!!! ΕΥΧΑΡΙΣΤΟΥΜΕ ΑΓΑΠΗΤΕ ΣΟΠΕΝ
I cry every time I listen to Chopin's music as my son used to play Chopin when he was younger. He wanted to be a concert pianist. Now he is a lawyer and harly play the piano. He still play the ogan in the church but even this one is getting lesser. Adult life has taken away his fun. He has to earn to pay the mortgage.
Guy is talented, will be famous one day...
You are stupid
@@fjames208 r/woooosh r/kidsarestupidwtf
Yep I heard that he's been gigging lately
I wonder if he’s putting on a performance near me?
@@fjames208 damn it flew right over
Chopin never fails to put me to sleep. I’m not well versed in music terminology, so you’ll have to pardon me, but it feels like his piano is a bird that returned to a nest built months ago after a long winter frost’s chirps. It’s so calming, yet so stimulating. I’m not someone who typically enjoys this style of music. I actually prefer mid 2000s alt rock and 80s post-punk discotheque. Honestly, this is astoundingly good. As I type these last few words, I drift off to sleep. Before that though, I want to say that no matter who you may be, someone out there appreciates you. Keep on moving. Keep that drive. Good luck and good night.
Thank you. Thank you... really.
@@kapixon8869 I’m glad to have touched someone :)
Soo romantic
Oh, damn. Thank you!!!
It's a trait of the Romantic period for sure.
Chopin is so moving, beautiful, diverting and trembling! Goose bumps..
spermalicious
Who actually searches for classical/romance period music, finds this page and then THUMBS IT DOWN? If you can't appreciate the greatest musical genius of all time then you are truly lost and have no love in your heart.
***** I"m cool...hahaha
is the answer idiots?
jockejocke1 yes it probably is
jockejocke1 yes it probably is
Maybe the very loud commercials, destroying the mood in less than 1 sec !
*Hey Chopin! I love you, please come to Brazil!!!!*
Hes not alive
@@yaeltuttebel ele está sendo irônico...
@@yaeltuttebel of course he is alive, he is my cousin
Simmmmmm 😂
@@samuelpark902 are sure you weren't drunk 😃
Nothing like some relief from the crazy world we found ourselves in this year. Remember all, people have had it much worse than us and pulled through. Be strong and be safe.
Mulțumesc cu iubire și recunoștință! Vă binecuvântez!
Chopin is my favorite composer. So sorry that he lived a short life.
@Mateusz Wilk You said the right words. Probably he is playing piano in haven now.
His compositions were more than compositions; they were love expressed by piano strings. He still my favorite piano composer.
@30 M3M35 Zoe yes, good that left us marvelous songs.
@Mateusz WilkHe left a good memory from his Country.
Man we couldve still saw him old😢😢😢
@@marccalebflores8270 Unfortunately he died so young. Can you imagine how many more wonderful songs would he left if his life was longer? My best piano composer.
Abbey Simon, one of the best pianist of Chopin songs once said that Chopin was one of the great inspiration in his carrier as piano player.
This music brings out my deepest feelings, sadness, happiness and it makes me glad to be a pianist.
If you really like piano music, this is the best selection... and the best pianist and piano compositer of all times in the music history... Thank you Master Chopin...
My all time favorite composer
He could make you laugh,cry,smile,frown all in the same nocturne and in different majors and minors
Truly expressed the soul of humanity and his music still has such an impact on my daily life
Thank you fryderyk chopin
This kind of music should be played around the streets. People would be less stressfull and more contemplatives. More inspired, less depressed
or in stores instead of that raucous stuff they play, we might be able to stay longer and buy more
Good idea!
Agreed!
Probably would help if they stopped chemtrailing and poisoning the water
@@mediaisthevirus Yah but what do you expect from lizard people who fake moon landings?
Listening to Chopin music is one of those little pleasures of life, a total auditory ecstasy.
I think I like Chopin the best of all classical composers. At least of the ones I have yet heard. Fantastic music. Bless.
May God bless you, man. You worship the doctrine of the devil, and wage war on God's people.
tccapone Im sorry, what?! Im confused :c
Jonathan Hong lol me too
Renji Mao Jonathan Hong I think he thinks Wagner = Hitler = Devil. Which is, to say the least, pretty stupid.
Joseph Zsombor-Pindera No, I believe he is talking about the user, who has the profile of a total neo nazi. I agree that Wagner is good, though...
I enjoy every song of the greatest pianist Chopin! . Thanks Poland for Chopin!❤️
Thank you for saying that. I’m Polish and I cherish this guy. An orchestra in his fingers. But France made him later in his life.
He was born to a Polish mother and French father which later made him a “French” because he spent his later life in France etc. It doesn’t matter. What matters is that he was an-omnipotent composer who died too early.
Imagine if he composed more?
I always cry when listening to chopin its SO beautiful.
omgg samee
me too
yes !
I'm in floods.. So utterly beautiful ❤️
I almost cry but imma dude so i cant
Chopin is my absolute favorite, so incredibly beautiful
The world needs to hear this. It is perfection.
you and i are the world.. ... .
MrDozip And me! :P ^_^
MrDozip
+Me
Reda Zaki
Agent Smith: Me Too...
28jjman
I don't understand why there are over 17k dislikes there.....
To me chopin isn;t any more an ordinary person, his soul turned into music. To play his pieces well is one of my life goal.
That's quite a goal.🏞
It skips...
Must be Muslims. In their culture there’s no such thing as classical music.
Do you have any experience in playing piano? Because there are some pieces adequate for beginners!
One of my favorite things to listen to! Chopin's work is so beautiful, it can be sad and expressing hope at the same time.
I play piano and have been trying modern composers like Einaudi, but Chopin is the greatest of all and will never be surpassed. I can endlessly listen to his Nocturnes, followed be his Preludes, followed by everything else he ever wrote :)
Every time we listen to Chopin, we seem to hear and discover something new among the notes - we wonder if that's how you feel too? 😊 by the way, if you're looking for modern composers with a Chopin influence, we definitely recommend Luke Faulkner! He even wrote a "Hommage à Chopin". You can stream it on Spotify: open.spotify.com/album/6FPZOmLPOa8jtgNIGnRV45?si=C_HkTiiKTQGtXxo3AtLF8Q. If you have time to check it out, we would love to hear your thoughts!
@@HALIDONMUSIC Thank you so much for sharing that link, he seems to have captured Chopin's essence in a new, very interesting way. I feel he has great potential to create something truly unique and interesting in the future! My only criticism is the dynamics of the piece (a bit too loud sometimes). I'm not sure if Mr. Faulkner is a friend of yours, but I sense greatness from what I heard. If you're reading this Luke, keep at it! Honestly, it doesn't matter what critiques I have as the piece is still brilliant, and I am just a random on the internet, just giving my 2 cents as a long time musician (you are leagues above me so please don't take this the wrong way 😊 )
I'm from South Africa, and I totally love Chopin's work. the first piece of Chopin l knew was the Nocturne No.1 in Bb minor Op.9, and it became the very first piano song i actually learnt to play... Chopin was a genius.
I'm from america, and why do you find it important to tell me that you're from South Africa?
ok this was from 2 months ago and why do you find it important to mention you're from america
@@simanolastname2399 to emphasize that no matter where you come from, Chopin's work resonates and speak to different people from all walks of life.
Whoooooooooooooosh
LINDUMNDENI MLUNGISI you are awesome
Anyone in October??
Here same October 2024
its hard to explain but when i listen to instrumental music it unearths my own emotions, rather than lyrical music where i have to listen to other people's problems. instrumental is more adaptable and becomes more.. personalised. anyone get me?
Yea, that makes sense. In songs with lyrics, the lyrics pretty much steer you towards certain emotions or thoughts...Classical is more abstract. Aside from the song's tempo and notes being played, they're usually not "about" anything, so it's more open to your own interpretation.
In my opinion, lyrical music is about someone else expressing their emotions to you, instrumental is about you finding your own.
I feel the same, I use to listen to hiphop, rap a lot but I feel like it just bring my thoughts to certain places, not to mention nowadays the lyrics of those songs are bit.... Too much? So it brings to me to stop listening those but classical ones like Schubert & Chopin, etc. I still like hiphop & rap because those are good beats when you step on the dance floor
I know I'm late to the discussion but I want to voice my opinion on the matter.
I love instrumental songs. The music I prefer the most is pure techno with minimal to no lyrics.. I can relate it to any kind of mood I have : Angry, happy, sad, etc.. I appreciate classical, but for different occasions : work, peacefull state of mind. This to say that I agree with you, instrumental music is superior from the fact that you set the mood you want to have. Not to say you can't do that with lyrical music, but it's easier with instrumental.
Thats because classical or unlyrical music USUALLY has kore effort and time put into it
Greatest gift from Poland to the world... Thank you Poland
2019, the World still need Chopin.
More than ever.
@Mario Vinicius
The more national, the more international - this is a kind of paradox :)
PS. No words can describe how much we Poles love our Fryderyk ❤
from poland AND france in fact
@Cedric Debeaulieu Ce qui est sûr, c'est que Chopin se considérait, et était considéré par ses contemporains, comme un Polonais.
@@jamespatagueule9013 poland has so little to show for that they must be extra proud of one half-pole ^^. chopin was rather french than polish though, lived most of his life in france etc.
@@lionlepine2945 Dumb frogposter, Chopin constantly refrenced Poland. He might've been half french but he felt 100% polish
My friends always look at me weird when I say I listen to classical music, but this sound, it's truly beautiful. it helps me sleep and I have it playing when I'm drawing, I love it so much.
same:) i hear it to sleep, while drawing, or doing anything else haha all the time💕
No, that's not weird.
What is weird is that you've made friends with philistines.
Leon Davis To each their own, right? That's what I tell them.
Nerd Monstar
I agree totally. Each to their own.
That being said, I'm reminded of one of the worst insults in the Russian language: "nekulturny". To call someone "uncultured" is to call them worse than a dog. Anywhere in Russia, that epithet will get you a clip upside your earhole. If not worse.
Your friends are weird. Not you (:
Thank you Poland for giving us such a gem for eternity 🇵🇱
France 🇫🇷
Nie ma za co
You dont have to thanks ;)
You’re welcome 😇
@@reallifehack4790 ?
@@reallifehack4790 il est polonais pas francais il a juste demenager en france a 21 ans
There is no any single flaw!
Perfect harmony of his soul and his piano.
I always cry when I listen to classical music! But are good tears. Tears that I actually enjoy
little is so sensitive women
melancholic
Piano - possibly the king of all instruments...
not possibly... it IS. the skill cap for piano is much higher than most, if not all other instruments out there
Tim L
You obviously never tried violin ;)
And violin ;)
Have anyone one tried the hongraise dance of guitar ?that is realy difficult and not this
i think is the most complete of all the instruments every single instrument have a wonderful sound if you know how to play it... but i repeat.. is MY OPINION greddings ! :3
I', Polish, and a teacher of Geography in the UK secondary school. I play Chopin in my lessons when students work independently. They are calm, focused and the atmosphere changes with first notes... everytime.
Thank you Polland for Chopin and Marie Curie
and the supermodel Paulina
Spoko
🇵🇱❤
french
@@pablo_czcigodny7225 Chopin was half Polish, half French.
100 years later, Justin Bieber will be long forgotten, but Chopin's music will still be around. Actually it's criminal to even compare that little brat with the maestro.
+Thousand Sunny jb is already forgotten! :D
+Thousand Sunny don't compare him with kids.. but yes you said that at the second sentence
+Thousand Sunny 100 years from now it will be remembered as a tragedy and a federal crime, committed as an act of treason after she realized that no country actually wanted her.
+Thousand Sunny Oh don't be so judgmental, it's not like he's polluting the airwaves and infecting people with cancer, let the kids who like his music have the freedom to do just that.
+Thousand Sunny You're under arrest then.
Chopin Chopin Chopin ! Who can't love his music ??!! His unic style, it doesn't juste make us smile but feel so good, suddently we're in another world, just us and his music.. so magic, amazing, beautiful, chopin ! ^^
His Mother was playing piano when expecting a baby and then after Fryderyk was born she used to play piano with little Fritz on her lap... all this in a little Family House in Zelazova Vola near Warsaw/Poland :-)
And that should be why chopin was so amazing ! ^^
euuuuuuuu depuis quand tu parle anglais!!!!!
he knows me better than anyone on this planet chopin. he is divine.
yes!
Dziekuje Bardzo Chopin!! Love from Greece!!
I can't hold my tears back! I love Chopin's music.
AARMMYYYY
Bangtan Sonyeondan Jimin pls
- Guuille Becker - Bangtan Sonyeondan istg army we everywhere ....XD
Bangtan Sonyeondan armyyyyyy
ARMYYYYYYY
Listening to Chopin is like choppin-g onions, it always makes me cry
+MoogDnB Haaha :D
Lol that's so lame and so funny. I'm gonna use it.
LOL
That won't work though, cause you pronounce Chopin not as you do in chop but kinda like shopan...
MoogOn! I just finally got my answer! I just asked my husband, after I listened to Tristesse ........is this song sad to you? He said yes, it's a little sad.............and I answered Yes, see? Every time I hear it I want to cry! And did you know he wrote his first composition when he was 8 years old? Polonaise in G Minor - Pull it up and listen to it! :)
Nasz kochany polski brylant. Jak to miło gdy tylu obcokrajowców, tylu cudzoziemców wyraża takie na wskroś przebijające sympatią opinie o Naszym wspaniałym rodaku Fryderyku. Może jakiś Polak też podziela moją opinię...... zatem "łapka w górę"w mój komentarz :)
Does anyone know where Chopin was born, studied and lived for firstly 20 years?
Banerled Ukraine?
Rafał Tomków
Gwatemala towarzyszu.
Fryderyk Franciszek Chopin (1810-1849) was a Polish composer and virtuoso pianist.
Chopin was born in Żelazowa Wola, a village near Warsaw in Poland. His mother was Polish, and his father was a French immigrant to Poland (he was very young, 16 years old, when he went to Poland to the farm where he worked. He became an ardent Polish patriot. Most of his life, until the death spent in Poland). Fryderyk Chopin was raised in a Polish home as a Pole. His native language was Polish. Chopin grew up in Warsaw and completed his musical education there. Following the Russian suppression of the Polish November 1830 Uprising, he settled in Paris as part of the Polish Great Emigration and never returned to his homeland.
The vast majority of Chopin's works are for solo piano, though he also wrote two piano concertos, a few chamber pieces and some songs to Polish texts. Chopin used to compose music inspired by Polish national tunes, he composed Revolutionary Etude after Polish failed revolution against Russia in 1831. Chopin's music is Polish not only because he composed polonaises and mazurkas (traditional Polish dances), but because it grows out of Polish speech and Polish emotionality, as much as Rachmaninov sounds Russian and Gershwin and Copland sound American. Chopin's last will was to bury his heart in Warsaw... Urn with Chopin's heart was immured in a pillar of The Church of the Holy Cross in Warsaw.
"Varsovian by birth, a Pole at heart, and through his talent a citizen of the world" - C.K.Norwid about Fryderyk Chopin.
Norwid was a writer and Chopin's friend. Best regards from Poland.
Rafał Tomków Ty chyba nie wiesz, co to ironia. Narazie to ty sie osmieszyles i te 10 osob, co daly ci lapke srapke
I’ve been listening to this to do homework for at least 5-6 years and I wish I would’ve commented on this video back in high school! Hi future self, I’m sure you’ll be reading this in the next 5 years.
La interpretación es bastante mediocre; sin embargo la musica de Chopin es magnífica; busquen pianistas con mas sentimiento.
i should comment now
@@husamabuharthiah7182 same
I just saw my comment from 2 years ago lol
@@artemischen4086 That is awesomesauce and we should all pick a date to come back and say how well we did lol so 4/23 every year at 10a est?
I'm a 16 year old boy who likes classical but is native to mexico, daim, but I like the songs because I can feel them, and I can see a story when I listen to his songs. It's very impressive, something that pop and rap doesn't have, something I've never experienced somewhere else
Dear Osler, isn't it great when you come upon something that just touches your heart like that? The beauty allows us to touch a higher level of spirituality. I'm glad you are so interested in music, Osler. There is much that is so sublime, it brings a happy tear to even tough guys' eyes.
I also enjoy your native country's music, and I'm from Vienna. There is a whole world out there for you to explore! Wonderful music! It will also help us all to be strong during these difficult times. Classical music also helps calm animals (if not supersonically loud), and plants thrive, too! BLESSINGS TO ALL!
Listening classical music is a healing for many people including myself. Classic music make me chill and it takes me to another world. Really there is history in the music and every composer wrote different histories through through their songs.
I love classic music.
At 16 i was like you. It's rare a thing to see a 16 year old understand and feel like music like this these days. You might have a very special brain make sure you take advantage of it.
@@marcellepesek3038 😃😃
Rap definitely can tell a story as well. Listen to illmatic or something
Chopin is easily my favourite composer in totality. There are many who I like and admire but I rarely like everything or nearly all of their work ... Chopin on the other hand ...
Ravel and Debussy might be my favorite composers for individual pieces such as their string quartets, but I've never heard a dull piece of music by Chopin and I think I've heard more of his work than anyone else's, possibly (more than the prolific Mozart or Beethoven, perhaps!).
***** Do you quarrel, sir?
Sounds like a friendly disagreement lol. I'll have to check out more Bach now too :)
I have a hard time deciding but Chopin would be in the conversation for sure as far as I'm concerned.
You are all arguing over different personalities and compositions. Each of these men that are debated over as the best classical composer is like the argument of whether cats or dogs are better. Different people appreciate different styles. Yes they may be of the same genre, but the men listed in the comments have very different personalities and composition styles. Scholars study for years on just one personality and never get to the ends of who is better because they are all too different. That's my two cents.
This is the best type of music to have playing in the background of your home during the day. Good dinner music, too.
In the BACKGROUND!?!?!? NO!
Tanirhum Well, someone hasn't been to a proper diner at night with a date before.
My favorite musician for all this time. Very talented one.
Yeah I agree but I’m also a big Mozart fan
Child prodigy. Wrote most of his famous works before he turned 21. I think Aeolian Harp is the most beautiful piano composition ever written.
@@hayleydog10Not true
Greatest gift from Poland to the world... Thank you Poland
and someone would said it was polonium
@@michakarenko1964 🤣
The Witcher francaise?
from poland and france in fact
@@dmytro_berbets I was gunna say CDPR!
Mozart was and still is my favorite for a few songs that really are like magic. Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata is a magical song. But I remember Chopin being the only Classical artist who had a touch of magic in almost every song. Unlike Mozart and Beethoven, Chopin was almost always good. To this day it's rare for a composer to be almost always that good. Chopin should be way more famous in my opinion. He is famous, but to the general public he's probably unheard of.
I would disagree slightly my friend! The music of Chopin no doubt is excellence, or sublime, as i appreciate it so much. But to me, as a Piano lover, and teacher of the same. I would go with Liszt! Liszt is the best, in my opinion, because of the Mephisto waltz, and the Hungarian Rhapsodies. One must admit, that the music of both these geniuses would be some what similar in skill level. But i would still go with Liszt, who was a Casanova of the romantic era, but gave up leisure life to become a priest.
I've never listened to Liszt before. From what little I've heard so far, he has a very flowing style. He's undoubtedly highly skilled.
He's also has moments of romantic magic. I'm not very familiar with classical music, so I'll definitely add Liszt to my playlist being that of what little I know he seems exceptional.
Stavros Schoinas
Liszt and Chopin were also friends, it wasn't just hostility between them.
Shylo Vilecoscious
Chopin has much more emotional and powerful songs such as his funeral march and "tristesse", while Liszt had songs that were just straight up awesome, such as his El Contrabandista and Hungarian Rhapsody.
BrocookiesTRB Try Mozart's String Quartet 15 in D minor K.421 all movements. I love all four movements, but a certain part of the fourth movement is my favorite. I remember there being a fifth movement. But for some reason it's only known for having four movements. I'll have to check that later.
But yes. First thing I noticed about Liszt is his strength and skill. Whereas Chopin plays with harmony of notes more.
un merveilleux compositeur que chopin.précieux, délicat, virevoltant, précis, mélodieux. . .et bien plus encore.🧡
Chopin is my favorite composer. No matter what years we are in, the beauty of classical music never fades ...
Mam 30 lat,wiem kim jest Chopin od podstawówki, a dopiero teraz słucham Go na powaznie, bez przerwy. Mam żal do siebie,że tyle lat żyłem w nieświadomości. Teraz wiem gdzie szukać MUZYKI
Lepiej późno niz wcale...rzekł żółw spóźniając się ma pociąg
Listening w headphones while my parents are fighting in the kitchen :)
EDIT: WOW thank you everyone for the kind words really
AHAHAAHA
XD
I feel u
It will get better.
Don 't blame yourself.
Do something that maker you beter as yesterday strijd on for progression no matter age or state of mind.
Love me.
You.
Us.
We.
L😂L
Anyone from September 2024?
What ?
😁
ME !!!
I am doing math exercise😭😭
Yes.
In that music you can hear that their desire (not only Chopin's but all Polish great migrants in XIX age like musicians, writers, painters etc.) to live in their own free country, that they never had (they were born while there was no Poland on the political map). As a Pole I was teached all the culture of that period of our history, and it is amazing that I've noticed that there were 3 countries that wanted to depolonizate us, and the result of 123 years of being out of political map is only the extreme bloom of polish culture.
I'd like to also notice that in Chopin's music I think, that I can hear his desire of free Poland, that he have never experienced. For me this will always be something bigger, above the understanding of the people from always-free countries.
great analysis. I do beleive your theory about his music
Chopin is the focking best you guys
Ok m8
+SoaringMuse So sad and beautiful and intoxicating, I cant get enough
+SoaringMuse nice spelling
Tushar Mehra thx
cheers
The passion of Chopin and the glory of Beethoven are major reasons that I was able to keep my sanity during a certain period of my life.
I hear you. Also congratulate you for looking for such sane methods to keep the calm instead of picking any vices
Indeed, myself as well. To hear music that held so much feeling helped me to realize I could get through...
Just imagine sitting in a theater hearing this and thinking you will probably never hear it again. You get to listen this one time and then it lives on in your mind. Living in this time would have been hard
"All art is a gift of the Holy Spirit. When this light shines through the mind of a musician, it manifests itself in beautiful harmonies." ~ Baha'i Quotation
Everytime I need to think about a great decision, I come here and listen to this beautiful masterpiece. Thanks, Chopin
Also, pray.💛
This music takes a soul on a journey, doesn’t it? A happy journey..
What a fascinating age we live in. If it weren’t for TH-cam and the internet I most likely would have never been exposed to this beautiful music.
just think about all the wonderful things that remain there yet undiscovered, or those things that we are never going to see because they are now lost in history. :0
This Joeschmoe
mheow mhaoew when you gain any knowledge, the main thing you learn is how much you don’t know.
so true : ) Isn't it good though to know you want to learn more?? Enjoy : )
Yeah, you'd be stuck with Katy Perry and Taylor Swift. 😝
A huge consolation for a frazzled human mind. Thank you Chopin
How can 2 thousand people unlike this???!!! I can understand someone who does not like to listen to classical music, but not someone who click unlike!!!
*ahem* DISlike
Sory, my mistake!!! Thanks!!!
i disliked this video, but i enjoy the music
Aqworlds Gel That is the stupidest comment I have ever read.
Aqworlds Gel Hahahaha troll detected
A Varsovian by birth, a Pole in his heart and with his talent, and a citizen of the world.
Rodem Warszawianin, sercem Polak, a talentem świata obywatel.
Best classic music ever. Helps to relax when I’m stressed.
Or to fall asleep:)
Varsovian... And french
Chopin jest tak delikatny i romantyczny... natchnione emocje jak pianka na morzu... jego tworczosc nalezy do okresu romantyzmu w Polsce
Pariz byl jego drugim domem I przyjaznia