VIOLONChopin, Frédéric
Chopin, Frédéric - "Grande Valse Brillante" in Eb Major for String Quartet
Opus 18
Quatuor à cordes


VoirPDF : "Grande Valse Brillante" in Eb Major (Opus 18) for String Quartet (13 pages - 378.92 Ko)342x
MP3 : "Grande Valse Brillante" in Eb Major (Opus 18) for String Quartet 39x 777x
MP3
Vidéo :
Compositeur :
Frédéric Chopin
Chopin, Frédéric (1810 - 1849)
Instrumentation :

Quatuor à cordes

Genre :

Classique

Tonalité :Mi♭ majeur
Arrangeur :
Editeur :
Frédéric Chopin
MAGATAGAN, MICHAEL (1960 - )
Date :1831
Droit d'auteur :Public Domain
Ajoutée par magataganm, 18 Janv 2019

Frédéric François Chopin (1810 – 1849) was a Polish composer and virtuoso pianist of the Romantic era who wrote primarily for solo piano. He has maintained worldwide renown as a leading musician of his era, one whose "poetic genius was based on a professional technique that was without equal in his generation."

Frédéric Chopin's published waltzes (actually valses -- a subtle but significant stylistic distinction) fall into two distinct categories: sparkling, highly ornamented jewels suitable, to at least some degree, for actual ballroom use; and more introspective, often rather melancholy, miniatures that are far removed from the fashionable Viennese waltzes of Joseph Lanner or Johann Strauss I. The earliest of the published waltzes (actually fifth in order of composition), the Grande Valse brillante in E flat major, Op.18, is an example of the former.

This aristocratic work presents its young composer in a particularly extroverted mood; surely the main theme of the work, introduced after a lively four-bar fanfare, is one of Chopin's most famous. The composer toys with a secondary, repeated-note gesture (marked leggieramente) before making a happily-chosen move to D flat major; the chromatic figure in parallel thirds that runs throughout a good part of this central section provides a good taste of the composer's more mature style. An extended version of the opening fanfare ushers in the reprise of the initial tune, which, upon reiteration some forty bars later, is broken up by the unexpected intrusion of two bar-long grand pauses.

While some, including the famous musicologist Huneker, have felt the (perhaps overly) effervescent quality of the Opus 18 Waltz to be vulgar, others see a kind of sly humor in the work's irrepressibly joyous tone. Whatever the Waltz's true sentiment is, Chopin, having visited Vienna and found the Viennese waltz to be entirely foreign to his nature (declaring, upon his return to Paris, that "I am still unable to play valses), seems wholly determined to reinvent the form in his own image.

Source: AllMusic (https://www.allmusic.com/composition/waltz-for-piano-n o-1-in-e-flat-major-op-18-ct-207-mc0002368706 ).

Although originally composed for solo piano, I created this interpretation of the "Grande Valse Brillante" in Eb Major (Opus 18) for String Quartet (2 Violins, Viola & Cello).
Partition centrale :Grande valse brillante en Min majeur (6 partitions)
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