Leopold Godowsky: 53 Studies on Chopin Étude, No. 47 in G-Flat Major, Op. 10, No. 5 and Op. 25, No. 9, “Badinage”
Oscar Wilde famously wrote, “After playing Chopin, I feel as if I had been weeping over sins that I had never committed, and mourning over tragedies that were not my own.” For Wilde “music creates a past of which one has been ignorant, and fills one with a sense of sorrows that had been hidden from one’s tears.” Wilde did not play the piano, but he was ever so cognizant of the romantic longing encoded in Chopin’s music. The same can be said for the contemporary French composer Franck Krawczyk, born 1969. Krawczyk has always cultivated friendships with artists from other disciplines. As a result, his works create unpredictable fusions between music and other art forms. Among his best-known compositions are works based on Mozart’s Magic Flute, J. S. Bach’s St. Matthew Passion, and this deeply moving choral composition Lacrimosa (Tears) based on Chopin’s Étude Op. 10, No. 6.
Franck Krawczyk: Lacrimosa (after Chopin Étude in E-flat minor, Op. 10, No.6)
But Chopin is not all weeping and tears! Certainly not in the hands of the Romanian-German jazz pianist Eugen Cicero. He started his piano studies at age four, and publically played his first Mozart piano concerto with orchestra at age six! For one reason or another, Cicero did not pursue a career as a conventional concert pianist. Rather, he got interested in jazz and started to experiment with a musical style located halfway between the classical and the jazz idiom. He was soon dubbed “Mister Golden Hands,” and he produced over 70 recording over his career. His most popular disk was called “Swinging the Classics,” and it included an arrangement of Chopin’s Waltz Op. 64, No. 1.
Eugen Cicero: “Minute Waltz”
Chopin almost exclusively wrote music for the piano. He is the only iconic composer who did not write symphonies, operas or choral works, and only a handful of compositions involves other instruments. Among his nearly 200 compositions, we find 169 for solo piano. Yet surprisingly, the composer seems to have been in love with the sound of the guitar. According to a quote attributed to him, “nothing is more beautiful than a guitar,” he writes, “save perhaps two.” Taking Chopin by his word, the Spanish composer and classical guitarist Francisco Tárrega (1852-1909) enlarged his performing repertory by fashioning transcriptions of piano works by Beethoven, Mendelssohn and Chopin. Although Tárrega was not the first guitarist to transcribe works from other media to his own, he nevertheless managed thanks to Chopin, to elevate the guitar to the comparable status of the piano and violin in the concert hall.
Fryderyk Chopin: Mazurka Op. 33, No. 4 (arr. Tárrega)
Chopin’s music prominently features in the repertory of the greatest classical pianists. But what’s more, these pianists frequently like to play their own Chopin arrangements as encores. Please join us next time for some musical fireworks a la Chopin.
Very inspiring ….
I wrote to ask Dr Predota for the source of his quote, attributed to Chopin, that ““Nothing is more beautiful than a guitar, save perhaps two”. After a period while my question was being moderated, it disappeared and I received no answer. I have searched for the origin of this quote without success, hence my question to Dr Predota. Would someone please clarify what the policy of this website is with regard to serious comments/questions? With thanks.
The quote is attributed to Chopin.
Thanks
So where does this quote come from? What’s the original source?
The original source of this quote attributed to Chopin is unknown. It might have originated in an English publication during the 1940s, but details are not known to me.
GP