

Schumann compared this scherzo to a Byronic poem, 'so overflowing with tenderness, boldness, love and contempt. The work was composed and published in 1837, and was dedicated to Countess Adele Fürstensein. It is no wonder that this is the most popular of the Scherzos. 31 Arthur Rubinstein, piano The Scherzo No. This is brilliant, big-boned Chopin, muscular music handled with structural integrity. The modulations are heady, the filigree and the passage work dazzling, and the intensity gripping, the latter particularly as Chopin sets the final pages ablaze with an unbridled passion that is the antithesis of the pale Chopin whose reputation is for some based on moon-drenched nocturnes and tender waltzes. From this point on the musical incidents accumulate. Then there are some toss-away ascending and descending single notes that prepare for the first lyric idea.īut there is still tension in this lyricism by way of the melody’s impetuosity and the accompaniment’s wonderfully buoyant cushion that provides a kind of breathless momentum. The extended opening section ends with a set of trills that act as a trajectory throwing the right hand up to the top of the keyboard for a swath of descending notes. The opening four notes return (three-longs-and-a-short, a famous enough rhythmic combination by 1837), and they become a kind of key which throughout the piece opens the door to a floodgate of tension and drama, as well as some pulsating Chopin poetics. After a pause, a very loud B-flat is followed by a long-held chord and in turn by four emphatic chords. Following a long-held B-flat, three soft and quick ascending notes lead to a longer note this is immediately repeated. In the present piece, the very opening gesture informs us that a drama is about to unfold. It is big and brawny, filled with magical harmonic coloration and huge pianistic flair it is also a little wordy (redundancy is one of the small flaws of each of the Scherzos), but that is a small price to pay for the boldness of spirit portrayed. 35, is a piano sonata in four movements.Chopin completed the work while living in George Sands manor in Nohant, some 250 km (160 mi) south of Paris, a year before it was published in 1840.The first of the composers three mature sonatas (the others being the Piano Sonata No.

It is big and brawny, filled with magical harmonic coloration and huge pianistic flair.
Chopin scherzo 2 rubinstein full#
The B-flat-minor Scherzo, the second of that genre’s four, was composed in 1837 and bears the full imprint of the composer’s unique creative qualities. The B-flat-minor Scherzo, the second of that genre’s four, was composed in 1837 and bears the full imprint of the composer’s unique creative qualities. ideally formed perfor- Rubinstein's three recordings of 2 vary noticeably from each. Several of Chopin’s large works came in fours, though not composed consecutively: there are four Impromptus, four Ballades, and the same number of Scherzos. The B minor Scherzos in sets I One of Chopin's most rarely performed.
