Étude Op.10 No.3 in E major is a solo piano work composed by Frédéric Chopin. This is a slow cantabile study, in which the right hand must maintain a singing tone in the melody whilst contributing to the accompaniment.
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Significance
This étude differs from most of Chopin's in its tempo. It marks a significant departure from the technical virtuosity required in études before Chopin's time. It concentrates on melodious phrasing and legato ambience of performance more than technical skill. It has been classified as a Tone Poem for piano by some critics, and is highly regarded as a quality manifestation of Chopin's love for Romantic Opera and Poland, where he was born. During a lesson with his pupil Adolf Gutmann, the latter began weeping and cried, "Oh, my homeland!".1 Chopin was said to have also noted this piece as the most intimate piece he has ever composed, stating that "In all my life I have never again been able to find such a beautiful melody."2 The Etude has also been known as "Tristesse", meaning "Sadness" in French.
Structure
This étude is very straightforward, with one theme, a variation, and a final reiteration of the theme. The first theme consists of the right hand's playing the slow melody along with Alberti bass figures. The left hand makes graceful leaps and sets the chordal foundation, leaving no ambiguity in the theme. A study on 115 commercially available recordings revealed that there is no 'correct' method of execution for this section in particular, as all recordings had some significant difference in tempo, acceleration, and timing 3. Chopin disliked excessive sentiments expressed during performance, as it tore the musical structure he initially intended. Chopin also eschewed a beleaguering tempo with distinct pulse since it destroyed the significance of the 2/4 time signature.4
The variation in the middle is where the étude becomes technically difficult to play. Although it stays chromatically centered around E Major, the passage, a long sequence of diminished seventh and tritone intervals, is littered with accidentals and irregular rhythms that make it difficult. The torrential variation eventually coalesces into the gentle rhythm of the first theme, and the Coda begins with a final restatement of the first theme.
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Popular derivative
- The 1939 song Tristesse by Tino Rossi
- The 1950 popular song "No Other Love," a hit for Jo Stafford, is derived from this melody.
- The song So Deep Is The Night, which was a UK hit for comedian and singer Ken Dodd in 1964, was also utilized from the same melody.
- Serge Gainsbourg's Lemon Incest in Love on the Beat, 1984.
- The theme song to Gankutsuou, We Were Lovers by Jean-Jacques Burnel, is based upon this melody.
- Michiru Oshima's Wakare no Kyoku composition, which is the piano piece heard in episode 51, Laws and Promises, of the anime Full Metal Alchemist, was inspired by this melody.
- The song "Dans La Nuit" by Sarah Brightman is derived from this melody. It was first released in the album "Classics" in 2001.
Notes
- ^ all music composition description. February 2, 2007.
- ^ Palmer, W: Chopin Etudes for the Piano, page 2. Alfred Publishing Co., Inc., 1992
- ^ I. Quantitative analysis of pianists' timing in the initial measures of Chopin's Etude in E major. Abstract. February 5, 2007.
- ^ Chopin's Grande Etudes. February 5, 2007.
External links
- The Ultimate Chopin Etudes Discography from Eternal Chopin Etudes Space
- Study Guide, Recordings and Sheet Music from Chopin Music
- Études Op.10: Free scores at the International Music Score Library Project.
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Wikipedia content modification information:
- This page was last modified on 29 December 2008, at 11:29.
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