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      • Chopin wrote few concertos and sonatas. Instead he perfected freer musical forms. Among his compositions are some 50 mazurkas, 26 preludes, 24 études, 19 nocturnes, 15 waltzes, 11 polonaises, 4 ballades, and 3 sonatas.
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  2. Frédéric Chopin was one of the greatest pianists of his day. Chopin was born in a town just outside of Warsaw, Poland. His mother introduced him to the piano; by the time he was six, Chopin played extremely well and was starting to compose. He gave his first concert at the age of eight.

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    Death and funeral

    {{multiple image |align= right |footer=Chopin's death mask, by Clésinger (photos: Jack Gibbons) |width=220 |direction=vertical With his health further deteriorating, Chopin desired to have a family member with him. In June 1849 his sister Ludwika came to Paris with her husband and daughter, and in September, supported by a loan from Jane Stirling, he took an apartment at the Hôtel Baudard de Saint-James on the Place Vendôme. After 15 October, when his condition took a marked turn for the wors...

    Overview

    Over 230 works of Chopin survive; some compositions from early childhood have been lost. All his known works involve the piano, and only a few range beyond solo piano music, as either piano concertos, songs or chamber music. Chopin was educated in the tradition of Beethoven, Haydn, Mozart, and Clementi; he used Clementi's piano method with his students. He was also influenced by Hummel's development of virtuoso, yet Mozartian, piano technique. He cited Bach and Mozart as the two most importan...

    Titles, opus numbers and editions

    Some of Chopin's well-known pieces have acquired descriptive titles, such as the Revolutionary Étude (Op. 10, No. 12), and the Minute Waltz (Op. 64, No. 1). However, except for his Funeral March, the composer never named an instrumental work beyond genre and number, leaving all potential extramusical associations to the listener; the names by which many of his pieces are known were invented by others. There is no evidence to suggest that the Revolutionary Étude was written with the failed Pol...

    Form and harmony

    Improvisationstands at the centre of Chopin's creative processes. However, this does not imply impulsive rambling: Nicholas Temperley writes that "improvisation is designed for an audience, and its starting-point is that audience's expectations, which include the current conventions of musical form". The works for piano and orchestra, including the two concertos, are held by Temperley to be "merely vehicles for brilliant piano playing ... formally longwinded and extremely conservative". After...

    The British Library notes that "Chopin's works have been recorded by all the great pianists of the recording era." The earliest recording was an 1895 performance by Paul Pabst of the Nocturne in E major, Op. 62, No. 2. The British Library site makes available a number of historic recordings, including some by Alfred Cortot, Ignaz Friedman, Vladimir...

    Chopin has figured extensively in Polish literature, both in serious critical studies of his life and music and in fictional treatments. The earliest manifestation was probably an 1830 sonnet on Chopin by Leon Ulrich. French writers on Chopin (apart from Sand) have included Marcel Proust and André Gide, and he has also featured in works of Gottfrie...

    International Chopin Piano Competition
    The 1st International Chopin Competition on Period Instruments
    Memorials to Frédéric Chopin
  3. Perhaps the greatest of all composers for the piano was Chopin. Called a “musical genius” when he was a teenager, Chopin composed a remarkable variety of brilliant pieces—warlike polonaises, elegant waltzes, romantic nocturnes, and poetic ballades and études.

  4. Frédéric Chopin. Chopin in 1849. Frédéric Chopin (1810-1849) was a composer of the Romantic era, writing mostly for the piano. His father was French and his mother was Polish. He grew up in Warsaw, Poland, but spent most of his adult life in Paris, France. He lived for many years with the French writer Aurore Dupin (aka George Sand).

  5. Chopin's music is full of heart-felt emotions, and "poetic" (poem-like) feelings. He's been called "the only truly great composer for the piano" (by Vladimir Horowitz). Use the videos and audios below to listen to at least threee pieces of Chopin's music.

  6. 3 days ago · How did Frédéric Chopin become famous? Frédéric Chopin become famous in Poland as a child prodigy both as a pianist and as a composer. His fame spread with concerts in Vienna in 1829.

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