Frédéric François Chopin ( /ˈʃoʊpæn/; French pronunciation: [fʁe.de.ʁik ʃɔ.pɛ̃]; Polish: Fryderyk Franciszek Chopin, also phonetically Szopen;[1] 22 February or 1 March 1810[2] – 17 October 1849) was a Polish composer and virtuoso pianist of French-Polish parentage. He is considered one of the great masters of Romantic music.[3] Chopin was born in Żelazowa Wola, a village in the Duchy of Warsaw. A renowned child-prodigy pianist and composer, Chopin grew up in Warsaw and completed his music education there; he composed many mature works in Warsaw before leaving Poland in 1830 at age 20, shortly before the November 1830 Uprising.
Following the Russian suppression of the Uprising, he settled in Paris as part of Poland's Great Emigration. During the remaining 19 years of his life, Chopin gave only some 30 public performances, preferring the more intimate atmosphere of the salon; he supported himself by sales of his compositions and as a piano teacher. After some romantic dalliances with Polish women, including an abortive engagement, from 1837 to 1847 he carried on a relationship with the French writer Amantine Dupin (pen name "George Sand"). For most of his life, Chopin suffered from poor health; he died in Paris in 1849 at age 39.
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. His piano works are often technically demanding, with an emphasis on nuance and expressive depth. Chopin invented the instrumental ballade and made major innovations to the piano sonata, mazurka, waltz, nocturne, polonaise, étude, impromptu, scherzo and prélude.
In 1817–27 Chopin's family lived in this Warsaw University building, now adorned with Fryderyk's profile (center)
Chopin's father, Nicolas Chopin, was a Frenchman from Lorraine who immigrated to Poland in 1787 at the age of sixteen. During the 1794 Kościuszko Uprising, he served in the Warsaw municipal militia, rising to the rank of lieutenant. In France he had been baptized Nicolas, but in Poland he used the Polish form of the name, Mikołaj. Though he had come from a foreign country, with time he became completely polonized and, according to Łopaciński, "undoubtedly considered himself a Pole."[4]
Nicolas subsequently tutored children of the aristocracy, including the Skarbeks, whose poor relation, Justyna Krzyżanowska, he married.[5] The wedding took place at the 16th-century parish church in Brochów on 2 June 1806. (Justyna's brother would become the father of American Union General Włodzimierz Krzyżanowski.[6][7])
Chopin was the couple's second child and only son. (The eldest child, Ludwika, was to become his first piano teacher, and several decades later was to repatriate his heart from Paris.) He was born at Żelazowa Wola, forty-six kilometres west of Warsaw, in what was the Duchy of Warsaw. The parish baptismal record, discovered in 1892, gives his birthday as 22 February 1810,[8] but a date one week later, 1 March, was stated by the composer and his family as his birthday;[9] according to Chopin in a letter of 16 January 1833 to the chairman of the Polish Literary Society in Paris,[10] he was "born 1 March 1810 at the village of Żelazowa Wola in the Province of Mazowsze."[11]
He was baptized on Easter Sunday, 23 April 1810, in the same Brochów church where his parents had married. The parish register cites his given names in the Latin form Fridericus Franciscus;[8] in Polish, he was Fryderyk Franciszek. His godfather was Fryderyk Skarbek (1792–1866), a pupil of Nicolas Chopin's—later a prison reformer who would design the Pawiak Prison of World War II ill fame, and great-great-uncle of World War II SOE agent Krystyna Skarbek; the godfather's son Józef Skarbek would, in 1841, marry Chopin's erstwhile fiancée Maria Wodzińska.
In October 1810, when Chopin was seven months old, the family moved to Warsaw, where his father had accepted an offer from lexicographer Samuel Linde to teach French at the Warsaw Lyceum. The school was housed in the Saxon Palace, and the Chopin family lived on the palace grounds. In 1817 Grand Duke Constantine requisitioned the Saxon Palace for military purposes, and the Lyceum was moved to the Kazimierz Palace,[12] which also hosted the newly founded Warsaw University. The family lived in a spacious second-floor apartment in an adjacent building. Chopin attended the Warsaw Lyceum from 1823 to 1826.
The Polish spirit, culture and language pervaded the Chopins' home, and as a result the son would never, even in Paris, perfectly master the French language.[13] Louis Énault, a biographer, borrowed George Sand's phrase to describe Chopin as being "more Polish than Poland".[15]
Others in Chopin's family were musically talented. Chopin's father played the flute and violin; his mother played the piano and gave lessons to boys in the elite boarding house that the Chopins maintained.[13][16] As a result Chopin became conversant with music in its various forms at an early age.[13]
Józef Sikorski, a musician and Chopin's contemporary, recalls in his Memoirs about Chopin (Wspomnienie Chopina) that, as a child, Chopin wept with emotion when his mother played the piano. By six, he was already trying to reproduce what he heard or make up new melodies.[17] He received his earliest piano lessons not from his mother but from his older sister Ludwika (in English, "Louise").[13]
Chopin's first professional piano tutor, from 1816 to 1822, was the Czech Wojciech Żywny.[18] Though the youngster's skills soon surpassed his teacher's, Chopin later spoke highly of Żywny. Seven-year-old "little Chopin" (Szopenek) began giving public concerts that soon prompted comparisons with Mozart as a child and with Beethoven.[13]
That same year, seven-year old Chopin composed two Polonaises, in G minor and B-flat major. The first was published in the engraving workshop of Father Izydor Józef Cybulski (composer, engraver, director of an organists' school, and one of the few music publishers in Poland); the second survives as a manuscript prepared by Nicolas Chopin. These small works were said to rival not only the popular polonaises of leading Warsaw composers, but the famous Polonaises of Michał Kleofas Ogiński. A substantial development of melodic and harmonic invention and of piano technique was shown in Chopin's next known Polonaise, in A-flat major, which the young artist offered in 1821 as a name-day gift to Żywny.[13]
About this time, at the age of eleven, Chopin performed in the presence of Alexander I, Tsar of Russia, who was in Warsaw to open the Sejm (Polish Parliament).[17]
As a child, Chopin displayed an intelligence that was said to absorb everything and utilize everything for its development. He early showed remarkable abilities in observation and sketching, a keen wit and sense of humor, and an uncommon talent for mimicry.[13] A story from his school years recounts a teacher being pleasantly surprised by a superb portrait that Chopin had drawn of him in class.[19]
In those years, Chopin was sometimes invited to the Belweder Palace as playmate to the son of Russian Poland's ruler, Grand Duke Constantine, and charmed the irascible duke with his piano-playing.[13] (A few years later, the Duke would flee the Belweder, just in the nick of time, at the very opening of the November 1830 Uprising, escaping the Polish officer cadets who rode up through the Royal Baths Park from their barracks in an effort to capture him.)
Julian Ursyn Niemcewicz attested to "little Chopin's" popularity in his dramatic eclogue, "Nasze Verkehry" ("Our Intercourse", 1818), in which the eight-year-old featured as a motif in the dialogues.[13]
In the 1820s, when teenage Chopin was attending the Warsaw Lyceum and Warsaw Conservatory, he spent every vacation away from Warsaw: in Szafarnia (1824 – perhaps his first solo travel away from home – and 1825), Duszniki (1826), Pomerania (1827) and Sanniki (1828).[20]
At the village of Szafarnia (where he was a guest of Juliusz Dziewanowski, father of schoolmate Dominik Dziewanowski)[21] and at his other vacation venues, Chopin was exposed to folk melodies that he later transmuted into original compositions. His missives home from Szafarnia (the famous self-styled "Szafarnia Courier" letters), written in a very modern and lively Polish, amused his family with their spoofing of the Warsaw newspapers and demonstrated the youngster's literary gift.[19]
An anecdote describes how Chopin helped quiet rowdy children by first improvising a story and then lulling them to sleep with a berceuse (lullaby) – after which he woke everyone with an ear-piercing chord.[19]
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Chopin's first piano teacher, Ludwika.
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Szafarnia manor where Chopin vacationed in 1824 and 1825
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Chopin, tutored at home until he was thirteen, enrolled in the Warsaw Lyceum in 1823, but continued studying piano under Żywny's direction. In 1825, in a performance of the work of Ignaz Moscheles, he entranced the audience with his free improvisation, and was acclaimed the "best pianist in Warsaw."[13]
In the autumn of 1826, Chopin began a three-year course of studies with the Silesian composer Józef Elsner at the Warsaw Conservatory, which was affiliated with the University of Warsaw (hence Chopin is counted among the university's alumni). Chopin's first contact with Elsner may have been as early as 1822; it is certain that Elsner was giving him informal guidance by 1823, and in 1826 Chopin officially began studying music theory, figured bass, and composition with Elsner.
In year-end evaluations, Elsner noted Chopin's "remarkable talent" and "musical genius." As had Żywny, Elsner observed, rather than influenced or directed, the development of Chopin's blossoming talent. Elsner's teaching style was based on his reluctance to "constrain" Chopin with "narrow, academic, outdated" rules, and on his determination to allow the young artist to mature "according to the laws of his own nature."[22]
In 1827 the family moved to lodgings just across the street from Warsaw University, in the south annex of the Krasiński Palace at Krakowskie Przedmieście 5 (the palace is now the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts). Here the parents continued running their elite boarding house for male students. Young Chopin lived here until he left Warsaw in 1830. (In 1837–39, artist-poet Cyprian Norwid would live here while studying painting at the Academy of Fine Arts; later he would pen the poem, "Chopin's Piano", about Russian troops' 1863 defenestration of the instrument.[23]) The Chopins' parlor (salonik Chopinów) is now a museum open to the public; here Chopin first played many of his early compositions.
Four boarders at his parents' apartments became Chopin's intimates: Tytus Woyciechowski, Jan Białobłocki, Jan Matuszyński and Julian Fontana. Chopin would share aspects of his Parisian life with the latter two.[24]
In 1829, Polish portraitist Ambroży Mieroszewski executed a set of five portraits of Chopin family members (the youngest daughter, Emilia, had died in 1827): Chopin's parents, his elder sister Ludwika, younger sister Izabela, and, in the first known portrait of him, the composer himself. (The originals perished in World War II; only black-and-white photographs remain.) In 1913, French musicologist and Chopin biographer Édouard Ganche would write that this painting of the precocious composer showed "a youth threatened by tuberculosis. His skin is very white, he has a prominent Adam's apple and sunken cheeks, even his ears show a form characteristic of consumptives." Chopin's younger sister Emilia had already died of tuberculosis at the age of fourteen, and their father would succumb to the same disease in 1844.[22][25]
According to Polish musicologist and Chopin biographer Zdzisław Jachimecki, comparison of the juvenile Chopin with any earlier composer is difficult because of the originality of the works that Chopin was composing already in the first half of his life. At a comparable age, Bach, Mozart and Beethoven had still been apprentices, while Chopin was perceived by peers and audiences to be already a master who was pointing the path to the coming age.[22]
Chopin himself never gave thematic titles to his instrumental works, but identified them simply by genre and number.[26] His compositions were, however, often inspired by emotional and sensual experiences in his own life. One of his first such inspirations was a beautiful young singing student at the Warsaw Conservatory and later a singer at the Warsaw Opera, Konstancja Gładkowska. In letters to his friend Tytus Woyciechowski, Chopin indicated which of his works, and even which of their passages, were influenced by his erotic transports. His artist's soul was also enriched by friendships with such leading lights of Warsaw's artistic and intellectual world as Maurycy Mochnacki, Józef Bohdan Zaleski and Julian Fontana.[27]
In September 1828, eighteen-year-old Chopin struck out for the wider world in the company of a family friend, the zoologist Feliks Jarocki, who planned to attend a scientific convention in Berlin. There Chopin enjoyed several unfamiliar operas directed by Gaspare Spontini, attended several concerts, and saw Carl Friedrich Zelter, Felix Mendelssohn and other celebrities. On his return trip, he was a guest of Prince Antoni Radziwiłł, governor of the Grand Duchy of Posen – himself an accomplished composer and aspiring cellist. For the Prince and his piano-playing daughter Wanda, Chopin composed his Introduction and Polonaise brillante in C major for cello and piano, Op. 3.[30]
Back in Warsaw, in 1829, Chopin heard Niccolò Paganini play and met the German pianist and composer Johann Nepomuk Hummel. In August the same year, three weeks after completing his studies at the Warsaw Conservatory, Chopin made a brilliant debut in Vienna. He gave two piano concerts and received many favorable reviews – in addition to some that criticized the "small tone" that he drew from the piano.[17]
This was followed by a concert, in December 1829, at the Warsaw Merchants' Club, where Chopin premièred his Piano Concerto No. 2 in F minor, Op. 21; and by his first performance, on 17 March 1830, at the National Theater, in Warsaw, of his Piano Concerto No. 1 in E minor, Op. 11. In this period he also began writing his first Études (1829–32).[17]
Chopin's successes as a performer and composer opened the professional door for him to western Europe, and on 2 November 1830, seen off by friends and admirers, with a ring from Konstancja Gładkowska on his finger and carrying with him a silver cup containing soil from his native land, Chopin set out, writes Jachimecki, "into the wide world, with no very clearly defined aim, forever."[30] He headed for Austria, intending to go on to Italy.
Later that month, in Warsaw, the November Uprising broke out, and Chopin's friend and traveling companion, the future industrialist and art patron Tytus Woyciechowski, returned to Poland to enlist. Chopin, now alone in Vienna, writes Jachimecki, "afflicted by nostalgia, disappointed in his hopes of giving concerts and publishing, matured and acquired spiritual depth. From a romantic... poet... he grew into an inspired national bard who intuited the past, present and future of his country. Only now, at this distance, did he see all of Poland from the proper perspective, and understand what was great and truly beautiful in her, the tragedy and heroism of her vicissitudes."[30]
When in September 1831 Chopin learned, while traveling from Vienna to Paris, that the uprising had been crushed, he poured "profanities and blasphemies, resembling the final verses of Konrad's[31] improvisation," in his native Polish language into the pages of a little journal that he kept secret to the end of his life.[32] He expressed fear for the safety of his family and other civilians, especially the womenfolk at risk of outrages by the Russian troops; mourned the death of "kindly [General] Sowiński" (to whose wife he had dedicated a composition); damned the French for not having come to the aid of the Poles; and expressed dismay that God had permitted the Russians to crush the Polish insurgents – "or are you [God] yourself a Russian?"[33] These outcries of a tormented heart found musical expression in his Scherzo in B minor, Op. 20, and his "Revolutionary Étude", in C minor, Op. 10, No. 12.[30]
Chopin arrived in Paris in late September 1831, still uncertain whether he would settle there for good.[30] In fact he would never return to Poland, becoming one of many expatriates of the Polish Great Emigration.[9] In February 1832 Chopin gave a concert that garnered universal admiration. The influential musicologist and critic François-Joseph Fétis wrote in Revue musicale: "Here is a young man who, taking nothing as a model, has found, if not a complete renewal of piano music, then in any case part of what has long been sought in vain, namely, an extravagance of original ideas that are unexampled anywhere..."[34] Only three months earlier, in December 1831, Robert Schumann, reviewing Chopin's Variations on "La ci darem la mano", Op. 2 (variations on a theme from Mozart's opera Don Giovanni), had written: "Hats off, gentlemen! A genius."[35]
After his Paris concert début in February 1832, Chopin realized that his light-handed keyboard technique was not optimal for large concert spaces. However, later that year he was introduced to the wealthy Rothschild banking family, whose patronage opened doors for him to other private salons.[17]
In Paris, Chopin found artists and other distinguished company, as well as opportunities to exercise his talents and achieve celebrity, and before long he was earning a handsome income teaching piano to affluent students from all over Europe.[36] He formed friendships with Hector Berlioz, Franz Liszt, Vincenzo Bellini, Ferdinand Hiller, Felix Mendelssohn, Heinrich Heine, Eugène Delacroix, Prince Adam Jerzy Czartoryski, Alfred de Vigny, and Charles-Valentin Alkan.[36]
Though an ardent Polish patriot,[37][38] in France he used the French versions of his given names and traveled on a French passport, possibly to avoid having to rely on Imperial Russian documents.[39] The French passport was issued on 1 August 1835, after Chopin had become a French citizen.[40]
In Paris, Chopin seldom performed publicly. In later years he generally gave a single annual concert at the Salle Pleyel, a venue that seated three hundred. He played more frequently at salons – social gatherings of the aristocracy and artistic and literary elite – but preferred playing at his own Paris apartment for small groups of friends. His precarious health prevented his touring extensively as a traveling virtuoso, and beyond playing once in Rouen, he seldom ventured out of the capital.[36] His high income from teaching and composing freed him from the strains of concert-giving, to which he had an innate repugnance.[17] Arthur Hedley has observed that "As a pianist Chopin was unique in acquiring a reputation of the highest order on the basis of a minimum of public appearances—few more than thirty in the course of his lifetime."[41]
In 1835 Chopin went to Carlsbad, where, for the last time in his life, he met with his parents. En route through Saxony on his way back to Paris, he met old friends from Warsaw, the Wodzińskis. He had made the acquaintance of their daughter Maria, now sixteen, in Poland five years earlier, and fell in love with the charming, intelligent, artistically talented young woman.[42] The following year, in September 1836, upon returning to Dresden after having vacationed with the Wodzińskis at Marienbad, Chopin proposed marriage to Maria. She accepted, and her mother Countess Wodzińska approved in principle, but Maria's tender age and Chopin's tenuous health (in the winter of 1835–1836 he had been so ill that word had circulated in Warsaw that he had died) forced an indefinite postponement of the wedding. The engagement remained a secret to the world and never led to the altar.[43] Chopin finally placed the letters from Maria and her mother in a large envelope, on which he wrote the Polish words "Moja bieda" ("My sorrow").[36]
Chopin's feelings for Maria left their traces in his Waltz in A-flat major, "The Farewell Waltz", Op. 69, No. 1, written on the morning of his September departure from Dresden. On his return to Paris, he composed the Étude in F minor, the second in the Op. 25 cycle, which he referred to as "a portrait of Maria's soul." Along with this, he sent Maria seven songs that he had set to the words of Polish Romantic poets Stefan Witwicki, Józef Zaleski and Adam Mickiewicz.[44]
After Chopin's matrimonial plans ended, Polish countess Delfina Potocka appeared episodically in Chopin's life as muse and romantic interest. He dedicated to her his Waltz in D flat major, Op. 64, No. 1, the famous "Minute Waltz".[36]
During his years in Paris, Chopin participated in a small number of public concerts. The list of the programs' participants provides an idea of the richness of Parisian artistic life during this period. Examples include a concert on 23 March 1833, in which Chopin, Liszt and Hiller performed J. S. Bach's concerto for three keyboards; and, on 3 March 1838, a concert in which Chopin, his pupil Adolphe Gutman, Alkan, and Alkan's teacher Pierre Joseph Zimmerman performed Alkan's arrangement, for eight hands, of Beethoven's 7th symphony.
Chopin was also involved in the composition of Liszt's Hexaméron; Chopin's was the sixth (and last) variation on Bellini's theme.
In 1836, at a party hosted by Countess Marie d'Agoult, mistress of friend and fellow composer Franz Liszt, Chopin met French author and feminist Amandine Aurore Lucille Dupin, the Baroness Dudevant, better known by her pseudonym, George Sand. Sand's earlier romantic involvements had included Jules Sandeau (their literary collaboration had spawned the pseudonym George Sand), Prosper Mérimée, Alfred de Musset, Louis-Chrystosome Michel, the writer Charles Didier, Pierre-François Bocage and Félicien Mallefille.[46]
Chopin initially felt an aversion to Sand.[36] He declared to Ferdinand Hiller: "What a repulsive woman Sand is! But is she really a woman? I am inclined to doubt it."[47] Sand, however, in a candid thirty-two page letter to Count Wojciech Grzymała, a friend to both her and Chopin, admitted strong feelings for the composer. In her letter she debated whether to abandon a current affair in order to begin a relationship with Chopin, and attempted to gauge the currency of his previous relationship with Maria Wodzińska, which she did not intend to interfere with should it still exist.[48] By the summer of 1838, Chopin's and Sand's involvement was an open secret.[36]
A notable episode in their time together was a turbulent and miserable winter on Majorca (8 November 1838 to 13 February 1839), where they, together with Sand's two children, had gone in the hope of improving Chopin's deteriorating health. However, after discovering the couple were not wedded, the deeply religious people of Majorca became inhospitable,[citation needed] making accommodations difficult to find; this compelled the foursome to take lodgings in a scenic yet stark and cold former Carthusian monastery in Valldemossa.
Chopin also had problems having his Pleyel piano sent to him. It arrived from Paris on 20 December but was held up by customs. (Chopin wrote on 28 December: "My piano has been stuck at customs for 8 days... They demand such a huge sum of money to release it that I can't believe it.") In the meantime Chopin had a rickety rented piano on which he practiced and may have composed some pieces.
On 3 December, he complained about his bad health and the incompetence of the doctors in Majorca: "I have been sick as a dog during these past two weeks. Three doctors have visited me. The first said I was going to die; the second said I was breathing my last; and the third said I was already dead."
On 4 January 1839, George Sand agreed to pay 300 francs (half the demanded amount) to have the Pleyel piano released from customs. It was finally delivered on 5 January. From then on Chopin was able to use the long-awaited instrument for almost five weeks, time enough to complete some works: some Preludes, Op. 28; a revision of the Ballade No. 2, Op. 38; two Polonaises, Op. 40; the Scherzo No. 3, Op. 39; the Mazurka in E minor from Op. 41; and he probably revisited his Sonata No. 2, Op. 35. The winter in Majorca is still considered one of the most productive periods in Chopin's life.
During that winter, the bad weather had such a serious effect on Chopin's health and chronic lung disease that, in order to save his life, the entire party were compelled to leave the island. The beloved French piano became an obstacle to a hasty escape. Nevertheless, George Sand managed to sell it to a French couple (the Canuts), whose heirs are the custodians of Chopin's legacy on Majorca and of the Chopin cell-room museum in Valldemossa.
The party of four went first to Barcelona, then to Marseille, where they stayed for a few months to recover. In May 1839, they headed to Sand's estate at Nohant for the summer. In autumn they returned to Paris, where initially they lived apart; Chopin soon left his apartment at 5 rue Tronchet to move into Sand's house at 16 rue Pigalle. The four lived together at this address from October 1839 to November 1842, while spending most summers until 1846 at Nohant.[49] In 1842, they moved to 80 rue Taitbout in the Square d'Orléans, living in adjacent buildings.[50]
It was from around this time that there is evidence of Chopin's playing an instrument other than the piano. At the funeral of the tenor Adolphe Nourrit, who had jumped to his death in Naples but whose body was returned to Paris for burial, Chopin played an organ transcription of Franz Schubert's lied Die Gestirne.[51]
During the summers at Nohant, particularly in the years 1839–43, Chopin found quiet but productive days during which he composed many works. They included his Polonaise in A flat major, Op. 53, the "Heroic", one of his most famous pieces. Sand describes Chopin's tumultuous creative process, filled with emotion, weeping, complaints, and hundreds of changes of concept eventually returning to the initial inspiration,[50] on an evening in Nohant with friend Eugène Delacroix:
Chopin is at the piano, quite oblivious of the fact that anyone is listening. He embarks on a sort of casual improvisation, then stops. 'Go on, go on,' exclaims Delacroix, 'That's not the end!' 'It's not even a beginning. Nothing will come ... nothing but reflections, shadows, shapes that won't stay fixed. I'm trying to find the right colour, but I can't even get the form ...' 'You won't find the one without the other,' says Delacroix, 'and both will come together.' 'What if I find nothing but moonlight?' 'Then you will have found the reflection of a reflection.' The idea seems to please the divine artist. He begins again, without seeming to, so uncertain is the shape. Gradually quiet colours begin to show, corresponding to the suave modulations sounding in our ears. Suddenly the note of blue sings out, and the night is all around us, azure and transparent. Light clouds take on fantastic shapes and fill the sky. They gather about the moon which casts upon them great opalescent discs, and wakes the sleeping colours. We dream of a summer night, and sit there waiting for the song of the nightingale ...
[52]
As the composer's illness progressed, Sand became less of a lover and more of a nurse to Chopin, whom she called her "third child." In the years to come she would maintain her friendship with Chopin while often affectionately venting her impatience in letters to third parties, referring to him as a "child," a "little angel," a "sufferer" and a "beloved little corpse."[50]
In 1845, as Chopin's health continued to deteriorate, a serious problem emerged in his relations with Sand. Those relations were further soured in 1846 by problems involving her daughter Solange and the young sculptor Auguste Clésinger. In 1847 Sand published her novel Lucrezia Floriani, whose main characters – a rich actress and a prince in weak health – could be interpreted as Sand and Chopin; the story was uncomplimentary to Chopin, who could not have missed the allusions as he helped Sand correct the printer's galleys. In 1847 he did not visit Nohant. Mutual friends attempted to reconcile them, but the composer was unyielding.[50]
One of these friends was mezzo-soprano Pauline Viardot. Sand had based her 1843 novel Consuelo on Viardot, and the three had spent many hours at Nohant. An outstanding opera singer, Viardot was also an excellent pianist who had initially wanted the piano to be her career and had taken lessons with Liszt and Anton Reicha. Her friendship with Chopin was based on mutual artistic esteem and similarity of temperament.[53] The two had often played together; he had advised her on piano technique and had assisted her in writing a series of songs based on the melodies of his mazurkas. He in turn had gained from Viardot some first-hand knowledge of Spanish music.[53]
In 1847, Sand and Chopin quietly ended their ten year relationship.[50] Count Wojciech Grzymała, who followed their romance from the beginning, commented, "If (Chopin) had not had the misfortune of meeting G.S. [George Sand], who poisoned his whole being, he would have lived to be Cherubini's age." Chopin died at thirty-nine; his friend Cherubini died in Paris in 1842 at the age of eighty-one.[54] The two composers are buried four meters apart at Père Lachaise Cemetery.
Chopin's public popularity as a virtuoso waned, as did the number of his pupils. In February 1848 he gave his last Paris concert. In April, with the Revolution of 1848 underway in Paris,[55] he left for London, where he performed at several concerts and at numerous receptions in great houses.[50] This tour was suggested to Chopin by his Scottish pupil and sometime secretary, Jane Stirling and her elder sister, the widowed Mrs. Katherine Erskine. Jane Stirling also made all the necessary arrangements and provided much of the necessary funding.
Toward the end of the summer he was invited by Jane Stirling to visit Scotland, staying at Calder House near Edinburgh and the castle (Johnstone,[56] in Renfrewshire, near Glasgow), both owned by Jane Stirling's family members. It was by then being rumored, even internationally, that Miss Stirling and Chopin would soon announce their engagement but apparently Chopin had no amorous feelings for her. While in Edinburgh he also spent time at 10 Warriston Crescent, residing at the home of the Polish GP, Dr. Adam Łyszczyński, and being treated by him. He was generally so weak that Łyszczyński or his servant had to carry Chopin up and down stairs. He gave a single concert in Edinburgh, at the Hopetoun Rooms on Queen Street (now Erskine House).[57]
In late October 1848, at the home of Dr. Łyszczyński,[58] Chopin wrote out his last will and testament—"a kind of disposition to be made of my stuff in the future, if I should drop dead somewhere," he wrote his friend Wojciech Grzymała. In his thoughts he was now constantly with his mother and sisters, and conjured up for himself scenes of his native land by playing his adaptations of its folk music on cool Scottish evenings at Miss Stirling's castle.[50]
Chopin made his last public appearance on a concert platform at London's Guildhall on 16 November 1848, when, in a final patriotic gesture, he played for the benefit of Polish refugees.[17] His appearance on this occasion proved to be a well-intentioned mistake, as most of the participants were more interested in the dancing and refreshments than in Chopin's piano artistry, which cost him much effort and physical discomfort.[59]
At the end of November, Chopin returned to Paris.[50] He passed the winter in unremitting illness, but in spite of it he continued seeing friends and visited the ailing Adam Mickiewicz, soothing the Polish poet's nerves with his playing. He no longer had the strength to give lessons, but he was still keen to compose. He lacked money for the most essential expenses and for his physicians. He had to sell off his more valuable furnishings and belongings.[50]
On 24 March 2011, Warsaw's Frédéric Chopin Museum recovered long-lost letters belonging to the composer. The letters are dated from 1845 to 1848, and describe his daily life and his Cello Sonata in G minor. The letters were up for display at the Frédéric Chopin Museum until 25 April 2011.[60]
Feeling ever more poorly, Chopin longed to have a family member with him. In June 1849 his sister Ludwika Jędrzejewicz, who had given him his first piano lessons, agreed to come to Paris.[50]
In September 1849, Chopin took a very beautiful, sunny apartment at Place Vendôme 12. The second-floor, seven-room apartment had previously housed the Russian embassy; Chopin could not afford it, but Jane Stirling, his wealthy Scottish pupil, rented it for him.[61]
On 15 October, when Chopin's condition took a marked turn for the worse, his numerous visitors were asked to leave, and a handful of his closest friends remained with him. A couple of times during those last two days, they thought that the end had come, but the composer was able to catch his breath again. He asked Delfina Potocka to play sonatas and prayed and called out to God, though only a few days earlier he had refused confession, saying that he did not believe in it. He complained that George Sand had promised that he "would die in her arms." He asked for a piece of paper and wrote: "Comme cette terre m'étouffera, je vous conjure de faire ouvrir mon corps pour [que] je ne sois pas enterré vif." ("As this earth will suffocate me, I implore you to have my body opened so that I will not be buried alive.")[61]
On Wednesday 17 October, after midnight, the physician leaned over him and asked whether he was suffering greatly. "Not any more," Chopin replied.[61] He died a few minutes before two o'clock in the morning.[62]
Chopin's disease and the cause of his death remained unclear and consequently have become a matter of medical argument. His death certificate stated the cause as tuberculosis. In 2008 an alternative cause of Chopin's death would be proposed: cystic fibrosis.[63][64] In counterpoint, it can well be argued that survival with cystic fibrosis in the 19th century until the age of 39 was virtually impossible, without modern respiratory therapy and medical support.[65] A full review of the possible causes of Chopin's long illness was published in 2011.[66] Given the contextual facts, it is much more likely that Chopin suffered from pulmonary tuberculosis.[67]
Many people who had not been present at Chopin's death would later claim to have been. "Being present at Chopin's death," writes Tad Szulc, "seemed to grant one historical and social cachet."[68] Those actually around his bed appear to have included his sister Ludwika Jędrzejewicz, Princess Marcelina Czartoryska, Solange and Auguste Clésinger (George Sand's daughter and son-in-law), Chopin's friend and former pupil Adolf Gutmann, his friend Thomas Albrecht, and his confidant, Polish Catholic priest Father Aleksander Jełowicki.[62]
Later that morning, Clésinger made Chopin's death mask and a cast of his left hand, to which Chopin had given prominence in his compositions. Before the funeral, pursuant to his dying wish, his heart was removed. It was preserved in alcohol (perhaps brandy) to be returned to his homeland, as he had requested.[63] His sister smuggled it in an urn to Warsaw, where it was later sealed within a pillar of the Holy Cross Church on Krakowskie Przedmieście, beneath an epitaph sculpted by Leonard Marconi, bearing an inscription from Matthew VI:21: "For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also." Chopin's heart has reposed there – except for a period during World War II, when it was removed for safekeeping – within the church that was rebuilt after its virtual destruction during the 1944 Warsaw Uprising. The church stands only a short distance from Chopin's last Polish residence, the Krasiński Palace at Krakowskie Przedmieście 5.
The funeral, to be held at the Church of the Madeleine in Paris, was delayed almost two weeks, until 30 October, due to the extensiveness of the elaborate organisation. The delay before the funeral enabled a number of people to travel from London, Berlin and Vienna who would not normally have been able to attend.[69] Many of the notable names in the French literary and artistic world were invited, but most of the musical fraternity were curiously overlooked.[69]
It was quickly decided that Mozart's Requiem would be sung. This was said to have been Chopin's own wish, but his friend Gutmann denied Chopin ever asked for it, and attributed this romantic fancy to journalistic licence. A great deal about Chopin was written in the Parisian press between the death and the funeral, some of it simply made up, and some unfounded stories subsequently made their way into reference books as fact.[69] The Requiem has major parts for female voices, but the Church of the Madeleine had never permitted female singers in its choir. The Church was nevertheless happy to assist, on condition that the female singers remain behind a black velvet curtain. The soloists in the Requiem included the bass Luigi Lablache – who had sung the same work at the funerals of Haydn and Beethoven, and had also sung at Bellini's funeral – and Chopin's and George Sand's friend, the mezzo-soprano Pauline Viardot.[70] The soprano was Jeanne-Anais Castellan, and the tenor was Alexis Dupont.[69] Also played were Chopin's Préludes No. 4 in E minor and No. 6 in B minor. The organist was Franz Liszt.[citation needed]
The funeral was attended by nearly three thousand people, but George Sand was not among them.
The funeral procession traversed the considerable distance from the church, in the center of town, adjacent to the Opera, to Père Lachaise Cemetery at the city's eastern edge, where he had expressed a wish to be buried. It was led by the dean of the Polish Great Emigration, the aged Prince Adam Jerzy Czartoryski; immediately after the casket, which was borne by shifts of artists (including Eugène Delacroix, cellist Auguste Franchomme and pianist Camille Pleyel), walked Chopin's sister Ludwika.[61]
At the graveside, the Funeral March from his Sonata No. 2 in B flat minor, Op. 35, was played, in Napoléon Henri Reber's instrumentation[71] (although Giacomo Meyerbeer, who was in attendance, later expressed disappointment that he had not been invited to arrange the work).[69]
Chopin's tombstone, featuring the muse of music, Euterpe, weeping over a broken lyre, was designed and sculpted by Auguste Clésinger. The expenses of the funeral and monument, in the amount of five thousand francs, were covered by Jane Stirling, who also paid for Chopin's sister's return to Warsaw.[61] Jane Stirling wore black mourning dresses for a long time thereafter (some sources say for the rest of her life).
Chopin's grave attracts numerous visitors and is consistently decorated with flowers, even in winter.
-
Cast of Chopin's left hand by Clésinger
-
-
In 1909, to celebrate Chopin's centenary, the Russian composer Sergei Lyapunov wrote a "symphonic poem in memory of Chopin", titled Zhelazova Vola, Op. 37 (Russian: Жeлaзoвa Вoлa), a reference to Chopin's birthplace.[72]
In 1926 a bronze statue of Chopin, designed by sculptor Wacław Szymanowski in 1907, was erected in the upper part of Warsaw's Royal Baths (Łazienki) Park, adjacent to Ujazdów Avenue (Aleje Ujazdowskie). The statue was originally to have been installed in 1910, on the centenary of Chopin's birth, but its execution was delayed by controversy about the design, then by the outbreak of World War I.
On 31 May 1940, during the German occupation of Poland in World War II, the statue was destroyed by the Nazis.[citation needed] It was reconstructed after the war, in 1958. Since 1959, free piano recitals of Chopin's compositions have been performed at the statue's base on summer Sunday afternoons. The stylized willow over Chopin's seated figure echoes a pianist's hand and fingers. Until 2007, the statue was the world's tallest monument to Chopin.
A 1:1-scale replica of Szymanowski's Art Nouveau statue is found in Warsaw's sister city of Hamamatsu, Japan. There are also preliminary plans to erect another replica along Chicago's lakefront in addition to a different sculpture commemorating the artist in Chopin Park for the 200th anniversary of Chopin's birth.
A bronze bust memorializing Chopin stands at Symphony Circle outside Kleinhans Music Hall in Buffalo, New York.
There are numerous other monuments to Chopin around the world. The most recent, by a small margin taller than the Warsaw statue, is a modernistic bronze sculpture by Lu Pin [4] [5] in Shanghai, China, that was unveiled on 3 March 2007.
The world's oldest monographic music competition, the International Chopin Piano Competition, founded in 1927, is held every five years in Warsaw.
Established in 1954, the Fryderyk Chopin Museum is housed in Warsaw's Ostrogski Palace, seat of the Fryderyk Chopin Society. Refurbished for the 200th anniversary (2010) of Chopin's birth, the Fryderyk Chopin Museum is the most modern museum in Poland.
Periodically the Grand prix du disque de F. Chopin is awarded for notable Chopin recordings, both remastered and newly recorded work.
Named for the composer are the largest Polish music conservatory, the Fryderyk Chopin University of Music in Warsaw; Warsaw Chopin Airport; the Chopin crater on Mercury; and asteroid 3784 Chopin.
Autograph musical quotation from
Op. 53, signed by Chopin on 25 May 1845
The great majority of Chopin's compositions were written for the piano as solo instrument; all of his extant works feature the piano in one way or another. Chopin, according to Arthur Hedley, "had the rare gift of a very personal melody, expressive of heart-felt emotion, and his music is penetrated by a poetic feeling that has an almost universal appeal.... Present-day evaluation places him among the immortals of music by reason of his insight into the secret places of the heart and because of his awareness of the magical new sonorities to be drawn from the piano."[41]
It is very difficult to characterise Chopin's oeuvre briefly. Robert Schumann, speaking of Chopin's Sonata in B-flat minor, wrote that "he alone begins and ends a work like this: with dissonances, through dissonances, and in dissonances," and in Chopin's music he discerned "cannon concealed amid blossoms." Franz Liszt, in the opening of his biography about Chopin (Life of Chopin), termed him a "gentle, harmonious genius." Thus disparate have been the views on Chopin's music. The first systematic, if imperfect, study of Chopin's style came in F. P. Laurencin's 1861 Die Harmonik der Neuzeit. Laurencin concluded that "Chopin is one of the most brilliant exceptional natures that have ever stridden onto the stage of history and life, he is one who can never be exhausted nor stand before a void. Chopin is the musical progone[73] of all progones until now."[74]
According to Tad Szulc, though technically demanding,[75] Chopin's works emphasize nuance and expressive depth rather than sheer virtuosity. Vladimir Horowitz referred to Chopin as "the only truly great composer for the piano."[76]
Chopin's music for the piano combined a unique rhythmic sense (particularly his use of rubato), frequent use of chromaticism, and counterpoint. This mixture produces a particularly fragile sound in the melody and the harmony, which are nonetheless underpinned by solid and interesting harmonic techniques. He took the new salon genre of the nocturne, invented by Irish composer John Field, to a deeper level of sophistication. Three of Chopin's twenty-one Nocturnes were published only after his death in 1849, contrary to his wishes.[77] He also endowed popular dance forms, such as the Polish mazurek and the Viennese Waltz, with a greater range of melody and expression.
Chopin's mazurkas, while based somewhat on the traditional Polish dance (the mazurek), were different from the traditional variety in that they were suitable for concerts halls as well as dance settings. With his mazurkas, Chopin brought a new sense of nationalism, which was an idea that other composers writing both at the same time as, and after, Chopin would also incorporate into their compositions. Chopin’s nationalism was a great influence and inspiration for many other composers, especially Eastern Europeans, and he was one of the first composers to clearly express nationalism through his music. Furthermore, he was the first composer to take a national genre of music from his home country and transform it into a genre worthy of the general concert-going public, thereby creating an entirely new genre.
Chopin was the first to write ballades[78] and scherzi as individual pieces. He also took the example of Bach's preludes and fugues, transforming the genre in his own Préludes.
Chopin reinvented the étude,[79] expanding on the idea and making it into a gorgeous, eloquent and emotional showpiece. He also used his Études to teach his own revolutionary style,[17] for instance playing with the weak fingers (3, 4, and 5) in fast figures (Op. 10, No. 2), playing in octaves (Op 25, No.10) and playing black keys with the thumb (Op. 10, No. 5).
Several of Chopin's pieces have become very well known—for instance the Revolutionary Étude (Op. 10, No. 12), the Minute Waltz (Op. 64, No. 1), and the third movement of his Funeral March Sonata No. 2 (Op. 35), which is often used as an iconic representation of grief. Chopin himself never named an instrumental work beyond genre and number, leaving all potential extra-musical associations to the listener; the names by which we know many of the pieces were invented by others.[80] The Revolutionary Étude was not written with the failed Polish uprising against Russia in mind; it merely appeared at that time. The Funeral March was written before the rest of the sonata within which it is contained, but the exact occasion is not known; it appears not to have been inspired by any specific personal bereavement.[81]
Other melodies have been used as the basis of popular songs, such as the slow section of the Fantaisie-Impromptu (Op. posth. 66) and the first section of the Étude, Op. 10, No. 3. These pieces often rely on an intense and personalised chromaticism, as well as a melodic curve that resembles the operas of Chopin's day – the operas of Gioachino Rossini, Gaetano Donizetti, and especially Vincenzo Bellini.[82] Chopin used the piano to recreate the gracefulness of the singing voice, and talked and wrote constantly about singers.
Chopin's style and gifts became increasingly influential. Robert Schumann was a huge admirer of Chopin's music, and he used melodies from Chopin and even named a piece from his suite Carnaval after Chopin. This admiration was not generally reciprocated, although Chopin did dedicate his Ballade No. 2 in F major to Schumann.
Franz Liszt was another admirer and personal friend of the composer, and he transcribed for piano six of Chopin's Polish songs. However, Liszt denied that he wrote Funérailles (subtitled "October 1849", the seventh movement of his piano suite Harmonies poétiques et religieuses of 1853) in memory of Chopin. Though the middle section seems to be modeled on the famous octave trio section of Chopin's Polonaise in A flat major, Op. 53, Liszt said the piece had been inspired by the deaths of three of his Hungarian compatriots in the same month. However, Liszt's Hungarian Rhapsody No. 2 in C-sharp minor borrows heavily[citation needed] from the "funeral march" third movement of Chopin's Piano Sonata No. 2 in B-flat minor. This influence can be seen in the first segment of Liszt's piece: this section expands on Chopin's minimalist melody.[citation needed]
Johannes Brahms and the younger Russian composers, too, found inspiration in Chopin's examples.[74] Chopin's technical innovations became influential. His Préludes (Op. 28) and Études (Opp. 10 and 25) rapidly became standard works, and inspired both Liszt's Transcendental Études and Schumann's Symphonic Studies. Alexander Scriabin was also strongly influenced by Chopin; for example, his 24 Preludes, Op. 11, are inspired by Chopin's Op. 28.
Jeremy Siepmann, in his biography of the composer, lists pianists whose recordings of Chopin are generally acknowledged to be among the greatest Chopin performances ever preserved: Vladimir de Pachmann, Raoul Pugno, Ignacy Jan Paderewski, Moriz Rosenthal, Sergei Rachmaninoff, Alfred Cortot, Ignaz Friedman, Raoul Koczalski, Arthur Rubinstein, Mieczysław Horszowski, Claudio Arrau, Vlado Perlemuter, Vladimir Horowitz, Dinu Lipatti, Vladimir Ashkenazy, Martha Argerich, Maurizio Pollini, Murray Perahia, Krystian Zimerman, Evgeny Kissin.
Arthur Rubinstein said the following about Chopin's music and its universality:
Chopin was a genius of universal appeal. His music conquers the most diverse audiences. When the first notes of Chopin sound through the concert hall there is a happy sigh of recognition. All over the world men and women know his music. They love it. They are moved by it. Yet it is not "Romantic music" in the
Byronic sense. It does not tell stories or paint pictures. It is expressive and personal, but still a pure art. Even in this abstract atomic age, where emotion is not fashionable, Chopin endures. His music is the universal language of human communication. When I play Chopin I know I speak directly to the hearts of people!
Although Chopin lived in the 19th century, he was educated in the tradition of Beethoven, Haydn, Mozart and Clementi; he used Clementi's piano method with his own students. He was also influenced by Hummel's development of virtuoso, yet Mozartian, piano technique. Chopin cited Bach and Mozart as the two most important composers in shaping his musical outlook.[83]
The series of seven Polonaises published in his lifetime (another nine were published posthumously), beginning with the Op. 26 pair, set a new standard for music in the form, and were rooted in Chopin's desire to write something to celebrate Polish culture after the country had fallen into Russian control.[84] The Polonaise in A major, Op. 40, No. 1, the "Military," and the Polonaise in A-flat major, Op. 53, the "Heroic," are among Chopin's best-loved and most-often-played works.
Chopin also wrote 24 different preludes as a tribute to J. S. Bach's "The Well Tempered Clavier." Chopin's preludes move up the circle-of-fifths, whereas Bach uses the chromatic scale to create a prelude in every major and minor tonality achievable on the clavier.[citation needed]
Chopin's music is well known for benefiting from rubato (which was how he himself performed his music),[85] as opposed to a strictly regular playing. Yet there is usually call for caution when the music is performed with wobbly, over-exaggerated, inappropriate "rubato" (e.g. attempting to justify insecure playing, with reference to expressive rubato).
His playing was always noble and beautiful; his tones sang, whether in full
forte or softest
piano. He took infinite pains to teach his pupils this
legato,
cantabile style of playing. His most severe criticism was "He—or she—does not know how to join two notes together." He also demanded the strictest adherence to rhythm. He hated all lingering and dragging, misplaced
rubatos, as well as exaggerated
ritardandos ... and it is precisely in this respect that people make such terrible errors in playing his works.
—Friederike Müller,
"From the Diary of a Viennese Chopin Pupil"[86]
However, while some can provide restrictive quotes about Chopin such as the above, often to the effect that "the accompanying hand always played in strict tempo", these quotes need to be considered in better context[87] in terms both of the time when they were made and of the situations that may have prompted the original writer to set down the thoughts. Constantin von Sternberg (1852–1924) has written:
It is amusing to note that even some serious persons express the idea that in tempo rubato "the right hand may use a certain freedom while the left hand must keep strict time." (See
Niecks'
Life of Chopin, II, p. 101.) A nice sort of music would result from such playing! Something like the singing of a good vocalist accompanied by a poor blockhead who hammers away in strict time without yielding to the singer who, in sheer despair, must renounce all artistic expression. It is reported by some ladies that Chopin himself gave them this explanation, but – they might not have understood him [...]
—Constantin von Sternberg (1852–1924),
Tempo rubato, and other essays[88]
There are also views of contemporary writers such as Hector Berlioz.[87][89]
This suggests that Chopin is not to be found at commonly encountered one-sided extremes. The unbalanced views are:
- that Chopin requires metronomic rhythm in the left hand;
- that insecure performances of Chopin can be justified with reference to rubato;
- that performances with particular inflections, that result from technical limits/insecurities rather than a performer's intentions, can be justified with reference to rubato.
Some performers' (and piano-schools') "too strongly held one-sided views on Chopin's way of playing rubato" may account for some unsatisfactory interpretations of his music.
Chopin is considered one of the great masters of Romantic music.[90]
Chopin regarded most of his contemporaries with indifference, though he had many acquaintances who were associated with romanticism in music, literature, and the fine arts—many of them via his liaison with George Sand. Chopin's music is, however, considered by many to epitomise the Romantic style.[91] The relative classical purity and discretion in his music, with little extravagant exhibitionism, partly reflects his reverence for Bach and Mozart.
Chopin never indulged in explicit "scene-painting" in his music, or used programmatic titles. He castigated publishers who renamed his compositions in this way.
Chopin's Polish biographer Zdzisław Jachimecki notes that "Chopin at every step demonstrated his Polish spirit – in the hundreds of letters that he wrote in Polish, in his attitude to Paris' [Polish] émigrés, in his negative view of all that bore the official stamp of the powers that occupied Poland." Likewise Chopin composed music to accompany Polish texts[92] but never musically illustrated a single French or German text, though he numbered among his friends several great French and German poets.[74]
According to his English biographer Arthur Hedley, Chopin "found within himself and in the tragic story of Poland the chief sources of his inspiration. The theme of Poland's glories and sufferings was constantly before him, and he transmuted the primitive rhythms and melodies of his youth into enduring art forms."[41]
In asserting his own Polishness, Chopin, according to Jachimecki, exerted "a tremendous influence [toward] the nationalization of the work of numerous later composers, who have often personally – like the Czech Smetana and Norway's Grieg – confirmed this opinion..."[74]
The Hungarian composer Franz Liszt, Chopin's contemporary, referred to Chopin's Polish homeland when he wrote that Chopin "may be ranked first among musicians who have had an individual poetic sense of a particular nation."[93] He referred to Chopin as "a Polish artist."[94] Composer Robert Schumann acknowledged the strength of Chopin's personal reaction to Russia's suppression of the November 1830 Uprising when he wrote that in Chopin's music one found "guns buried among the flowers."[95] Joseph Conrad, a great admirer of Chopin's music, considered the distinctive feature of the compositions to be their "Polishness".[96]
Some Polish writers have used, for Chopin's surname, the Polonized phonetic spelling, "Szopen" (pronounced [ˈʂɔpɛn]).
Over 230 Chopin works survive; some compositions from early childhood have been lost. All his known works involved the piano. Only a few ranged beyond solo-piano music, as either piano concertos or chamber music.
Chopin composed:
He also composed: a fantaisie; an Allegro de concert (possibly the remnant of an incomplete concerto); a barcarole; a berceuse; a bolero; a tarantelle; a contredanse; a fugue; a cantabile; a lento; a Funeral march; a Feuille d'album; a krakowiak for piano and orchestra; Variations on "Là ci darem la mano" for piano and orchestra; fantasia on themes from Polish songs with accompanying orchestra; a trio for violin, cello and piano; a sonata for cello and piano; a Grand Duo in E major for cello and piano on themes from Giacomo Meyerbeer's opera Robert le diable, co-written with Auguste Franchomme; and 19 Polish songs for voice and piano.[74]
The last opus number that Chopin himself used was 65, allocated to the Cello Sonata in G minor.
Chopin expressed a deathbed wish that all his unpublished manuscripts be destroyed. However, at the request of the composer's mother and sisters, his pianist friend and musical executor Julian Fontana selected 23 unpublished piano pieces and grouped them into eight opus numbers (Opp. 66–73). These works were published in 1855.[97]
In 1857, 17 Polish songs that Chopin wrote at various stages of his life were collected and published as Op. 74 (the order of the songs within the opus did not reflect the actual order of composition).[98] Two other songs were later published in 1910.
Works that have been published since 1857 have not received opus numbers. Instead, alternate catalog designations have been applied to them.
Chopin published much of his music simultaneously in Germany, France, and England. While this certainly earned the composer triple exposure and likely a good sum of revenue, the discrepancies between these three (or more) editions can be quite the conundrum. Ever the romantic, Chopin lived in a constant state of inspiration and improvisation, and was certainly prone to editing and revising his own music even after sending final drafts to his publishers. Especially considering that all published editions of his work during his lifetime were in fact proofed and approved by the composer himself, this is a popular source of anxiety amongst pianists and scholars.
How is one to know what the composer truly meant and wanted when we are presented with autographs and first drafts bearing the composer’s approval that differ in content? Details such as phrase markings, dynamics, fingerings, even the notes themselves are often subject to suspicion. The several editions of the time had different ways of dealing with this problem; the Germans of course believed that their version was infallible, the French called Chopin their own, having spent most of his adult life based in Paris, and the English publisher (a German who largely copied the French editions) annoyed Chopin by insisting on adding flowery titles to his pieces. Nearly 200 years later, the state of affairs in regards to Chopin editions has turned over a new leaf.
Today, several scholarly editions exist that attempt to organize the vast array of sources and compile the information in one presentable volume, notably the Paderewski and Polish National editions which contain lengthy and scholarly explanations and discussions regarding choices and sources. Even so, it is ultimately up to the taste of an editor as to which version of which piece suits them most at the given time, and perhaps Chopin himself faced the same dilemma, resulting in the variations we have today.
In 2010, the 90-min. BBC TV documentary Chopin – The Women Behind The Music explores Chopin's life, notably his encounters with the singers who enchanted the composer with their voices. The BBC announcement for the premiere refers to Jenny Lind as the "Swedish opera star, who so affected Chopin in the final years of his life."[99] Another documentary about Chopin was realized by Angelo Bozzolini and Roberto Prosseda for Italian Television in 2010: "Fryderik Chopin". Featuring interviews with Martha Argerich, Vladimir Ashkenazy, Daniel Barenboim, Charles Rosen, it is currently distributed by Euroarts. [100]
Possibly the first venture into fictional treatments of Chopin's life was a fanciful operatic version of some of its events. This opera, entitled Chopin, was written by Giacomo Orefice and produced in Milan in 1901. Orefice incorporated Chopin's music, arranged as arias; the operatic arrangements have been described as "coarse".[101]
Chopin's life and his relations with George Sand have been fictionalized in film. The 1945 biopic A Song to Remember earned Cornel Wilde an Academy Award nomination as Best Actor for his portrayal of the composer. Other film treatments have included: La Valse de l'adieu (France, 1928) by Henry Roussel, with Pierre Blanchar as Chopin and the collaboration of musicologist Édouard Ganche as special historical advisor; Impromptu (1991), starring Hugh Grant as Chopin; La note bleue (1991); and Chopin: Desire for Love (2002). Another cinema reference to Chopin occurs in Ingmar Bergman's Autumn Sonata; the difference in interpreting Chopin's Prelude No. 2 in A minor between pianist Charlotte Andergast and her daughter Eva constitutes a major scene.
Kate Beaton did a series of comics starring Chopin and Liszt.[102]
The PS3 / Xbox 360 role-playing game Eternal Sonata takes place in the mind of Chopin in the hours before his death and features Chopin as a major character.
- ^ The surname is pronounced [ˈʂɔpɛn̪] in Polish (and also spelled Szopen); [ʃɔˈpɛ̃] in French; and usually /ˈʃoʊpæn/ in English.
- ^ Some sources give 22 February. See Childhood for details.
- ^ "He was a Polish patriot to his bones and the divinely inspired romantic poet of Polish music." Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris, p. 19.
- ^ Łopaciński, "Chopin, Mikołaj," p. 427.
- ^ Zdzisław Jachimecki, "Chopin, Fryderyk Franciszek," Polski słownik biograficzny, vol. III, 1937, p. 420.
- ^ Michael Robert Patterson. "Wladimir B. Krzyzanowski". Arlingtoncemetery.net. http://www.arlingtoncemetery.net/wbkrzyzanowski.htm. Retrieved 14 February 2010.
- ^ Jarosław Krawczyk, "Wielkie odkrycia ludzkości. Nr 17," Rzeczpospolita, 12 June 2008.
- ^ a b The record of Chopin's baptism (in Latin, dated 23 April), parish of Saint Roch in Brochów, Poland, gave Chopin's birth date as 22 February: http://diaph16.free.fr/chopin//actenaissancechopin.png
- ^ a b Smolenska-Zielinska, Barbara. "Life / Biography – general outline". Fryderyk Chopin Society. http://www.chopin.pl/biography_chopin.en.html. Retrieved 26 February 2010.
- ^ Bibliothèque Polonaise de Paris: http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:hqcseFaFlEAJ:www.bibliotheque-polonaise-paris-shlp.fr/index.php%3Fid_page%3D210+Soci%C3%A9t%C3%A9+litt%C3%A9raire+polonaise+%C3%A0+Paris&cd=1&hl=fr&ct=clnk&gl=us&client=firefox-a (French)
- ^ Selected Correspondence of Fryderyk Chopin, abridged from Fryderyk Chopin's correspondence, collected and annoted by Bronislaw Edward Sydow, translated by Arthur Hedley, McGraw-Hill, 1963, p. 116
- ^ [1] Fryderyk Chopin Information Centre.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Jachimecki, p. 420.
- ^ "Chopin, in spite of spending half of his life in Paris, remained characteristically Polish and was a 'lonely soul.' Louis Enault, a biographer, said: 'The Slavs lend themselves gladly but never give themselves; Chopin is more Polish than Poland.'", Bauer, Marion (March 2007). Music Through the Ages – A Narrative for Student and Layman. Google Books. p. 248. ISBN 978-1-4067-3941-1. http://books.google.com/?id=kjJr5JcbH90C&pg=PA248&lpg=PA248&dq=george+sand+chopin+%22more+polish%22. Retrieved 14 February 2010.
- ^ "Four boarders at his parents' apartments became his intimates: Tytus Woyciechowski, Jan Białobłocki, Jan Matuszyński and Julian Fontana; he would share aspects of his [later] Parisian life with the latter two." Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris, pp. 41–42. "Tytus Woyciechowski was the most important... Fryderyk made him his most trusted confidant—the only one in his life—after Białobłocki, his earliest friend, died of bone tuberculosis in 1827." Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris, p. 42.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Hedley, Encyclopædia Britannica, p. 263.
- ^ Ambroży Mieroszewski's portrait of Wojciech Żywny, 1829.
- ^ a b c Described in the Polish Wikipedia article on "Fryderyk Chopin."
- ^ Artur Szklener, "Fryckowe lato: czyli wakacyjne muzykowanie Chopina" ("Fritz's Summers: Chopin's Musical Vacations"), Magazyn Chopin: Miesięcznik Narodowego Instytutu Fryderyka Chopina (Chopin Magazine: Monthly of the Fryderyk Chopin National Institute), no. 4, 2010, p. 8.
- ^ "Fryderyk Chopin - Information Centre - Dominik Dziewanowski - Biography". En.chopin.nifc.pl. http://en.chopin.nifc.pl/chopin/persons/detail/id/6608. Retrieved 2011-10-24.
- ^ a b c Jachimecki, p. 421.
- ^ Jan Zygmunt Jakubowski, ed., Literatura polska od średniowiecza do pozytywizmu (Polish Literature from the Middle Ages to Positivism), pp. 514–15.
- ^ Tad Szulc, "Chopin in Paris," pp. 41-42.
- ^ Édouard Ganche, Frédéric Chopin: sa vie et ses œuvres (Frédéric Chopin: His Life and Works), Mercure de France, 1913.
- ^ Jachimecki, p. 421. Hedley, Encyclopædia Britannica, p. 264: "He valued [sensuous beauty] throughout life as much as he abhorred descriptive titles or any hint of an underlying 'program.'" Programmatic titles were given to some of his works, against his wishes, by others, including opportunistic music publishers.
- ^ Jachimecki, pp. 421–22.
- ^ Chopin u Radziwiłła — Berlin 1829 (Chopin at Radziwiłł's — Berlin, 1829), by Henryk Siemiradzki. In Biblioteka chopinowska (The Chopin Library), vol. 7, Polskie Wydawnictwo Muzyczne, 1960.
- ^ "He himself wished to go to Vienna, his father seems to have been in favour of Berlin. Prince Radziwill and his wife had kindly invited him to come to the Prussian capital, and offered him apartments in their palais." Frederick Niecks, Frederick Chopin as a Man and Musician. "Chopin's fourteen days in Berlin,—he went there under the protection of his father's friend." James Huneker, Chopin: The Man and His Music.
- ^ a b c d e Jachimecki, p. 422.
- ^ Konrad was a patriotic Polish hero in poems by Chopin's friend Adam Mickiewicz. Chopin would later set some of Mickiewicz's poems to music.
- ^ "This relic of Chopin's spiritual becoming (whose text was first published by Stanisław Tarnowski in 1871) is today [1937] found among the Chopin mementoes in the National Library in Warsaw (initially the journal was preserved by Princess Marcelina Czartoryska, a noted pupil of the artist)." Zdzisław Jachimecki, "Chopin, Fryderyk Franciszek," Polski słownik biograficzny, vol. III, 1937, p. 422.
- ^ A reading of Chopin's words may be heard at the Chopin Museum in the Ostrogski Palace in Warsaw.
- ^ Jachimecki, pp. 422–23.
- ^ Sheppard, Linda. "Frédéric Chopin's Résumé". Musical overview (1600–2000): from the History à la carte series. Canada: Longbow Publishing Ltd, 2006.
- ^ a b c d e f g Jachimecki, p. 423.
- ^ David Ewen, p. 164.
- ^ Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris, pp. 12, 404.
- ^ A French passport used by Chopin is shown here [2]. Tad Szulc writes (Chopin in Paris, p. 69): "[...] the French granted him permission to stay in Paris indefinitely 'to be able to perfect his art'. Four years later, Frédéric became a French citizen and a French passport was issued to him on 1 August 1835. He is not known to have discussed his decision to change citizenship with anyone, including his father. It is unclear whether he did it to avoid renewing his Russian passport at the Russian embassy for patriotic reasons or simply as a matter of general convenience."
- ^ Tad Szulc (30 December 1999). Chopin in Paris: The Life and Times of the Romantic Composer. Da Capo Press. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-306-80933-0. http://books.google.com/?id=dyGlBVqYFjwC&pg=PA69&dq=%22chopin+in+paris%22++%22Fryderyk+became+a+French+citizen%22&cd=1#v=onepage&q=%22chopin%20in%20paris%22%20%20%22Fryderyk%20became%20a%20French%20citizen%22&f=false. Retrieved 7 May 2010.
- ^ a b c Hedley, Encyclopædia Britannica, p. 264.
- ^ She "made sketches of Chopin's head as he played the piano and talked, then sat him down in an armchair to paint his portrait in watercolors. It is one of the best portraits of Chopin extant—after that by Delacroix—with the composer looking relaxed, pensive, and at peace." Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris, p. 137. Wodzińska's portrait would seem accurate, judging by the accuracy of her 1830s self-portrait, as demonstrated by a photo of her in later life.
- ^ On 24 July 1841 Maria Wodzińska (7 January 1819 – 7 December 1896) married Count Józef Skarbek, son of Chopin's godfather, Fryderyk Florian Skarbek (1792–1866, a prison reformer who designed Warsaw's Pawiak Prison, had been tutored in French language by Chopin's father, and was a great-great-uncle of Krystyna Skarbek). The couple divorced after seven years, and in 1848 Maria married Władysław Orpiszewski, lessee of estates belonging to her first husband.
- ^ Jachimecki, p 423.
- ^ "The portrait was never fully completed, except for the faces, apparently because Chopin... did not like it ([Delacroix and Chopin] often violently disagreed over visual arts without jeopardizing their friendship), and the canvas remained at [Delacroix's] atelier until [his] death in 1863." Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris, p. 194. "Chopin and Delacroix... spen[t] hours discussing art — ... disagreeing most of the time (except about music) in the friendliest of ways. Over and over, Chopin argued that... eighteenth-century Classicism in painting remained superior to Delacroix's color-charged, heroic, and Romantic works." Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris, p. 248.
- ^ Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris, pp. 160, 165, 194–95.
- ^ Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris, p. 146.
- ^ André Maurois, Léila: the Life of George Sand, trans. by Gerard Hopkins, Penguin, 1980 (c 1953), pp. 317–20.
- ^ André Maurois, Léila, pp. 333, 337–8.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Jachimecki, p. 424.
- ^ Krzysztof Rottermund, "Chopin and Hesse: New Facts About Their Artistic Acquaintance," translation in The American Organist, March 2008.
- ^ George Sand, Impressions et souvenirs, chapter V, p. 86, quoted in André Maurois, Léila, pp. 338–9.
- ^ a b Rachel M. Harris. "The Music Salon of Pauline Viardot" (PDF). http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-04082005-095548/unrestricted/Harris_dis.pdf. Retrieved 14 February 2010.
- ^ Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris, p. 403.
- ^ During which, to Chopin's dismay, some of George Sand's radical political friends briefly came to power: Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris, pp. 366–73.
- ^ Zaluski, Iwo (2 June 2009). "Chopin's Scottish autumn – Frederick Chopin". Contemporary Review. http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2242/is_n1530_v263/ai_14234524/pg_2/. Retrieved 14 February 2010.
- ^ Michael T.R.B. Turnbull, Monuments and Statues of Edinburgh, Chambers, p. 53.
- ^ Chopin was very pleased to spend several days with the doctor, as he was always looking for someone with whom he could speak Polish—particularly now, as he knew no English. Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris, p. 382 and passim.
- ^ Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris, p. 383.
- ^ "Long-lost Chopin letters revealed by Polish museum". 24 March 2011. http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iXk-FI8qDObmo-ABKXwYZyCaz_7w?docId=CNG.f562d238b750a565f6cd658dfd177857.2d1. Retrieved 24 March 2011.
- ^ a b c d e Maria Barcz, "Etiuda paryska" ("Paris Étude"), Gwiazda Polarna (The Pole Star), vol. 101, no. 17 (14 August 2010), p. 16.
- ^ a b Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris, p. 400.
- ^ a b "Home is where the heart'll stay". News24.com South Africa. 26 July 2008. http://www.news24.com/printArticle.aspx?iframe&aid=d9a2b6c0-e9a2-41b3-92fe-947c69380a7a&cid=1132. Retrieved 14 February 2010. In 2008 a controversy arose over whether Chopin died of tuberculosis or cystic fibrosis, an incurable genetic disease whose complete clinical spectrum was not recognized until the 1930s, almost a century after his death. The Polish government declined to allow scientists to remove Chopin's heart from its repository for DNA testing.
- ^ According to a 23 June 2008 Times of India article: Polish cystic fibrosis specialist Wojciech Cichy says that the symptoms Chopin suffered throughout his life were typical of cystic fibrosis, a genetic illness which clogs the lungs with excess thick, sticky mucus. "From childhood he was weak, prone to chest infections, wheezing, coughing." As an adult weighing 40 kg (88.18 lb) at a height of five feet, seven inches, Chopin was chronically underweight—another symptom of cystic fibrosis. It has been proposed that Chopin's heart be retrieved from its alcohol-filled crystal urn, which reposes inside a pillar at Warsaw's Holy Cross Church, and be tested for the CFTR gene that is a marker for cystic fibrosis.[3]
- ^ D.J. Mantle, A.P. Norman, "Life-table for Cystic Fibrosis," British Medical Journal, issue 5524, pp. 1238–41.
- ^ Lagerberg, Steven. Chopin's Heart – The Quest to Identify the Mysterious Illness of the World's Most Beloved Composer. Lagerberg, 2011, ISBN 1-4564-0296-X.
- ^ But see "Chopin's disease."
- ^ Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris, p. 399.
- ^ a b c d e Frederick Niecks, Frédéric Chopin
- ^ Frederick Niecks, The Life of Chopin, vol. II, London, Novello, Ewers & Co., 1888, p. 325.
- ^ "Fryderyk Chopin 1810–1849: A Chronological Biography". Dobrowolski.com. http://www.dobrowolski.com/joeandpam/famouspols/chopin-bio.html. Retrieved 14 February 2010. [dead link]
- ^ "Crocks Newsletter". Clofo.com. http://www.clofo.com/Newsletters/C081028.htm. Retrieved 14 February 2010.
- ^ A "progone" is the opposite of an "epigone"—the latter being "an undistinguished imitator or follower of an important writer, painter, [composer] etc." The word "progone" (also written "progon") comes from the Greek progonos, meaning "born before."
- ^ a b c d e Jachimecki, p. 425.
- ^ Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris, pp. 197–98.
- ^ Newsweek magazine, May 1982
- ^ Letter of 12 December 1853 from Camille Pleyel to Chopin's sister, Louise Jedrzejewicz, cited in Chopin – Nocturnes, with note by Ewald Zimmermann, winter 1979/1980, published by G. Henle Verlag (ISM N M-2018-0185-8).
- ^ Scholes, Percy (1938), The Oxford Companion to Music, "Ballade".
- ^ Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris, pp. 112–13.
- ^ Jachimecki, p. 421. Hedley, Encyclopædia Britannica, p. 264.
- ^ Kornel Michałowski, Grove
- ^ Hedley writes: "From the great Italian singers of the age he learned the art of 'singing' on the piano, and his nocturnes reveal the perfection of his cantabile style and delicate charm of ornamentation." Hedley, Encyclopædia Britannica, p. 264.
- ^ Kornel Michałowski and Jim Samson. "Chopin, Fryderyk Franciszek." In Grove Music Online. (accessed 19 September 2010) (Subscription required)
- ^ Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris, p. 115.
- ^ Eigeldinger, Jean-Jacques (1986). Chopin: Pianist and Teacher as Seen by His Pupils. Cambridge University Press. p. 52. ISBN 0-521-36709-3.
- ^ Müller-Streicher, Friederike (1994). "Aus dem Tagebuch einer Wiener Chopin-Schülerin [1839–1841, 1844–1845"]. Wiener Chopin-Blätter (International Chopin Society). http://www.nifc.pl/chopin/bibliography/detail/id/11807. Retrieved 9 October 2007.
- ^ a b Ignacy Jan Paderewski. "Tempo Rubato". Polish Music Journal, Vol. 4; No. 1; Summer 2001. ISSN 1521-6039. http://www.usc.edu/dept/polish_music/PMJ/issue/4.1.01/paderewskirubato.html.
- ^ Constantin von Sternberg (1852–1924) (c. 1920). "Tempo rubato, and other essays". http://www.archive.org/details/temporubatoother00sterrich.
- ^ John F. Strauss. The puzzle of Chopin's Tempo Rubato. Clavier 22, no. 5 (May–June 1983).
- ^ Arthur Hedley et al., "Chopin, Frédéric (François)," Encyclopædia Britannica, p. 263.
- ^ See e.g. Charles Rosen, The Romantic Generation, chapters 5–7, Harvard University Press 1995. ISBN 978-0-674-77933-4
- ^ Jachimecki, pp. 425–26.
- ^ Dominique Bosseur, Histoire de la musique occidentale sous la direction de Brigitte et Jean Massin Fayard, 1985, p. 787.
- ^ Franz Liszt, Chopin, 1852, p. 163.
- ^ On music and musicians - Robert Schumann - Google Books. Books.google.com. http://books.google.com/books?id=JDW1KoVHtHkC&pg=PA132&lpg=PA132&dq=robert+schumann+chopin+guns+buried+in+flowers&source=bl&ots=b_slcbGTNI&sig=GJtETpTmMp2O69pQ_xwZIzwBCLA&hl=en&ei=L4R8TLPaE8KonAe5tJH4AQ&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5&ved=0CCwQ6AEwBA#v=onepage&q&f=false. Retrieved 2011-10-24.
- ^ Zdzisław Najder, Joseph Conrad: A Life, p. 528.
- ^ "Piano Society". Piano Society. http://www.pianosociety.com/cms/index.php?section=636. Retrieved 14 February 2010.
- ^ "Classical Archives". Classical Archives. http://www.classicalarchives.com/work/7303.html#about. Retrieved 14 February 2010.
- ^ BBC Four's TV documentary (15 October 2010): Chopin – The Women Behind The Music. In the last scene, James Rhodes (pianist) and Natalya Romaniw (soprano) perform an arrangement by Jenny Lind, a love song in Italian to Chopin's Mazurka in A-flat, Op. 24, n° 3: "Faithful love will never die."
- ^ "tvdistribution". .euroarts.com. http://www3.euroarts.com/artikel/tvdistribution/?id=005884_fryderyk_chopin. Retrieved 2011-10-24.
- ^ "Answers.com". Answers.com. http://www.answers.com/topic/chopin-opera. Retrieved 14 February 2010.
- ^ "Hark! A Vagrant!". 17 March 2010. http://www.harkavagrant.com/index.php?id=302. Retrieved 17 March 2010.
- Tad Szulc, Chopin in Paris: the Life and Times of the Romantic Composer, New York, Scribner, 1998, ISBN 0-684-82458-2.
- Zdzisław Jachimecki, "Chopin, Fryderyk Franciszek," Polski słownik biograficzny, vol. III, Kraków, Polska Akademia Umiejętności, 1937, pp. 420–26.
- Arthur Hedley et al., "Chopin, Frédéric (François)," Encyclopædia Britannica, 15th ed., 2005, vol. 3, pp. 263–64.
- Wincenty Łopaciński, "Chopin, Mikołaj," Polski słownik biograficzny, vol. III, Kraków, Polska Akademia Umiejętnosści, 1937, pp. 426–27.
- Édouard Ganche, Frédéric Chopin: sa vie et ses œuvres (Frédéric Chopin: His Life and Works), Mercure de France, 1913.
- Gastone Belotti, Chopin, l'uomo (Chopin the Man), 3 vols., Milan, Sapere, 1974.
- Gastone Belotti, Chopin, Turin, EDT, 1984, ISBN 88-7063-033-1.
- Gerald Abraham, "Chopin Frédéric," Encyclopedia Americana, 1986 ed., vol. 6, pp. 627–28.
- Adam Zamoyski, Chopin: a Biography, New York, Doubleday, 1980, ISBN 0-385-13597-1.
- Michałowski, Kornel, and Jim Samson, Chopin, Fryderyk Franciszek, Grove Music Online, edited by L. Macy (accessed 31 October 2006) (subscription access)
- Benita Eisler, Chopin's Funeral, Abacus, 2004.
- (German) Wuest, Hans Werner (2001). Frédéric Chopin, Briefe und Zeitzeugnisse. Cologne: Classic-Concerts-Verlag. ISBN 3-8311-0066-7.
- [The Book of the Second International Musicological Congress, Warsaw, 10–17 October 1999:] Chopin and His Work in the Context of Culture, studies edited by Irena Poniatowska, vols. 1–2, Warsaw, 2003.
- (Dutch) Bastet, Frédéric L. (1997). Helse liefde: Biografisch essay over Marie d'Agoult, Frédéric Chopin, Franz Liszt, George Sand. Amsterdam: Querido. ISBN 90-214-5157-3.
- Samson, Jim (1996). Chopin. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-816495-5.
- Siepmann, Jeremy (1995). Chopin: The Reluctant Romantic. London: Victor Gollancz. ISBN 0-575-05692-4.
- Samson, Jim. The Cambridge Companion to Chopin. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1992.
- Jean-Jacques Eigeldinger, Chopin: Pianist and Teacher, as Seen by His Pupils, Cambridge University Press, 1989, ISBN 0-521-36709-3.
- Samson, Jim. The Music of Chopin. Boston: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1985.
- André Maurois, Leila: the Life of George Sand, translated by Gerard Hopkins, Penguin, 1980 (c 1953).
- Jan Zygmunt Jakubowski, ed., Literatura polska od średniowiecza to pozytywizmu (Polish Literature from the Middle Ages to Positivism), Warsaw, Państwowe Wydawnictwo Naukowe, 1979, ISBN 83-01-00201-8.
- George Richard Marek and Maria Gordon-Smith, Chopin: A Biography, New York, Harper & Row, 1978.
- Chopin's Letters, collected by Henryk Opieński, translated by E. L. Voynich, New York, 1973.
- The Book of the First International Musicological Congress Devoted [to] the Works of Frederick Chopin, Warsaw, 16–22 February 1960, edited by Zofia Lissa, Warsaw, PWN, 1963.
- Selected Correspondence of Fryderyk Chopin, collected and annotated by B.E. Sydow, translated and edited by Arthur Hedley, London, 1962.
- Krystyna Kobylańska, Chopin in His Own Land: Documents and Souvenirs, Kraków, P.W.M., 1955.
- David Ewen, Ewen's Musical Masterworks: The Encyclopedia of Musical Masterpieces, 2nd ed., New York, ARCO Publishing Company, 1954.
- Artur Szklener, "Fryckowe lato: czyli wakacyjne muzykowanie Chopina" ("Fritz's Summers: Chopin's Musical Vacations"), Magazyn Chopin: Miesięcznik Narodowego Instytutu Fryderyka Chopina (Chopin Magazine: Monthly of the Fryderyk Chopin National Institute), no. 4, 2010, pp. 8–9.
- Maria Barcz, "Etiuda paryska" ("Paris Étude"), Gwiazda Polarna (The Pole Star), vol. 101, no. 17 (14 August 2010), pp. 15–16.
- Chopin and Other Musical Essays (1889) by Henry T. Finck
- Jeffrey Kallberg, “Chopin in the Marketplace: Aspects of the International Music Publishing Industry in the First Half of the Nineteenth Century,” Notes 39, no. 3 (March 1983): 539.
- Kazimierz Wierzyński, The Life and Death of Chopin, translated from the Polish by Norbert Guterman, foreword by Arthur Rubinstein, New York, Simon and Schuster, 1949.
- Mieczysław Tomaszewki, "Chopin. Człowiek, dzieło, rezonans", Polskie Wydawnictwo Muzyczne, 2005, ISBN 83-224-0857-9. (English version: Chopin, ISBN 978-83-7576-075-0).
- Piotr Mysłakowski, Andrzej Sikorski, Fryderyk Chopin: The Origins, Narodowy Instytut Fryderyka Chopina (The Fryderyk Chopin Institute The Fryderyk Chopin Institute), Warsaw, 2010.
- Zdzisław Najder, Joseph Conrad: a Life, translated by Halina Najder, Rochester, Camden House, 2007, ISBN 1-57113-347-X.
- Cecilia Jorgensen and Jens Jorgensen, Chopin and the Swedish Nightingale, Brussels, Icons of Europe, 2003, ISBN 2-9600385-0-9.
- Klasikal.com, Website dedicated to classical music. Includes video performances and sheet music of every composition of Frédéric Chopin.
- The Chopin Project, A guide to Chopin's solo keyboard music, with individual entries, on-demand audio, essays, quotes, references, biographies, and abundant links.
- The Chopin Society, The website of the Chopin Society in London provides information about their monthly concerts, membership of the Society, and offers insights into the life of the composer.
- listen to Chopin, This website is dedicated to Chopin's music. Includes almost all of the composer's music; Etudes, Mazurkas, Nocturnes, Preludes, Waltz, Ballades, Impromptus, Rondos, Scherzos, Concertos, and Sonatas .
- Chopin Music, Website and forum devoted to the life and works of Chopin: biographies, study guides, recordings, sheet music.
- Chopin: the poet of the piano, A favourite Chopin place since 1999 with biography, images, complete music and score, discussion forum, work list and analysis, quizzes and contests, noted interpreters/great pianists...
- Internet Chopin Information Centre, Chopin portal including calendar, catalogues, other information about Chopin, Chopin on the Web, and pianists' biographical notes.
- Chopin.pl, website under the auspices of Warsaw-based Fryderyk Chopin Society. Contains a biography, an outline of Chopin's works and musical style and pictures of original manuscripts.
- Bachtrack.com, Listings of live concerts of Chopin's music at Bachtrack, also see anniversary page at
- Frédéric Chopin and Samuel Barber, ArtsEditor.com opinion article 2010: Certain composers are so ubiquitous that to celebrate them seems unnecessary, especially as many others languish in relative obscurity. Still, every few years the public is reminded of the anniversary of a particular composer's birth, prompting a slew…
- Works by or about Frédéric Chopin in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
Some of the most critically praised recordings of Chopin's music are those of Martha Argerich, Claudio Arrau, Vladimir Ashkenazy, Alfred Cortot, Shura Cherkassky, Dang Thai Son, Samson François, Vladimir Horowitz, Evgeny Kissin, Dinu Lipatti, Nikita Magaloff, Arturo Benedetti-Michelangeli, Ivan Moravec, Janusz Olejniczak, Murray Perahia, Vlado Perlemuter, Maurizio Pollini, Sviatoslav Richter, Arthur Rubinstein, Tatiana Shebanova, Fou Ts'ong and Krystian Zimerman (all these pianists have at least 5 achievements of outstanding recordings of Chopin).
- Performances by Angela Lear: [6] 'The Chopin Collection' volumes 1–5, include rarely-heard original variants.
- www.200chopin.com, Recordings by all Deutsche Grammophon and Decca artists, full track streaming for free: Argerich, Freire, Pollini, Zimerman, Pires, Wang, Ott etc.
- Performances by Daniel Wnukowski: 'Heroic' polonaise, 2 nocturnes, 1 scherzo, 1 prelude
- Performances by Michael Sayers: Preludes Op. 28 Nos. 1 and 20
- Performances by Donald Betts: 3 ballades, 3 études, 2 nocturnes, 1 mazurka
- Performances by Paul Cantrell from In the Hands
- Performances by Alberto Cobo: Sonata No. 3, Ballade No. 1 and Fantasie-Impromptu, Sonata No. 2, Scherzo No. 2, Prelude No. 16
- Various performers from PianoParadise (some links are broken)
- MIDI files from Kunst der Fuge
- Preludes No. 4 and No. 6 arranged for voices, guitar, and bass by the John Link Project
- Performances of works by Frédéric Chopin in MP3 and MIDI formats at Logos Virtual Library
- Free Chopin Downloads (MP3 and WMA)
- the original Chopin Chopin as played by Angela Lear from autograph manuscripts. "Hear what Chopin really intended" BBC Music Magazine; "...Her Chopin recitals were altogether exceptional for perfect interpretation and maximum faithfulness to Chopin's intentions " Le Matin.
- Chopin selected works (MP3)
- Piano Society – A short biography and some free recordings in MP3 format, performed by Chiara Bertoglio, Roberto Carnevale, Eric Clark, Alexander Djordjevic, Ken Sasaki, Robert Ståhlbrand, Evelina Vorontsova
- Chopin With A Polish Touch, audio report by National Public Radio
- Narodowy Instytut Fryderyka Chopina, Warsaw, Poland
- Memorial Page at FindaGrave
- University of Michigan Chopin Project
- Chopin Works Review
- International Fryderyk Chopin Piano Competition
- Chopin2010 a/k/a "The Chopin Currency", a daily compendium of Chopiniana: news, reviews, videos, blogs, and more leading up to the Chopin Bicentennial in 2010
- Valldemossa, Majorca small town whose major asset is the remains of The Royal Chartreuse of Jesus Nazareth where Chopin lived for a short period with George Sand (the memories of this period are recorded in her book Winter in Majorca) in 1838/1839.
- The International Foundation Can Mossenya – Friends of Jorge Luis Borges, Historic estate, a significant part of The Royal Chartreuse of Jesus of Nazareth
- The safekeeping of a large collection of original Chopin manuscripts, including Concerto in F-minor among a total of 49 compositions and other priceless Polish art treasures in Canada during World War II, is documented by new research in 2004–2005 which was published in Chopin in the World.
- In 2010, the discovery and commemoration of the exact location of Chopin’s apartment at 74, Rue de Chaillot.
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Persondata |
Name |
Chopin, Frederic |
Alternative names |
Fryderyk Franciszek Chopin |
Short description |
Polish composer |
Date of birth |
22 February or 1 March 1810 |
Place of birth |
Żelazowa Wola, Poland |
Date of death |
17 October 1849 |
Place of death |
Paris, France |