Understanding Form: The Polonaise

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  • Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 47

  • @BytomGirl
    @BytomGirl 3 года назад +18

    Oh, my favorite Polonaise of Chopin that was also made into a song very popular in Poland. Every graduation ended with Polonaise danced by students in a certain pattern. It was loved by Russian composers, for example Tchaikovsky's Onegin or Glinka's from Ivan Susanin, it was also used by Minkus in ballet Paquita. in Poland most popular was Oginsky Polonaise, very patriotic and Russians tried to make it theirs. Polonaise has a rhythm that can't be ever mistaken for anything else

    • @POLMAZURKA
      @POLMAZURKA 2 года назад

      FOR EUROPEAN/ POLISH SOCIAL BALLROOM DANCES: POLONAISE AND MAZURKA ESSAYS, VIDEOS AND INSTRUCTIONS: GO TO THE INTERNET AND SEARCH FOR: ACADEMIA.EDU………..RAYMOND CWIEKA
      TO VIEW THE VIDEOS PASTE THE VIDEO - WORD - ESSAY TO A WORD
      DOCUMENT AND THEN CLICK & PRESS THE CTRL KEY ON THE VIDEO.
      ORIGINALLY THERE WERE SOME 49 BOOKS AND ESSAYS OF MINE.

    • @djmbst
      @djmbst Год назад

      I'm Russian and I can't stand Oginsky's polonaise. Russians didn't try to make it theirs - the Soviets did. It was pushed relentlessly down everyone's throat as some kind of patriotic classic, especially in connection to the victory in the WW2, and it always felt wrong and forced. Which is hardly a surprise, considering the history/background of that particular polonaise and the idea/feelings it was written to express. Russian composers appreciated the polonaise form for its grandeur, and for its celebratory mood, and for its rhythmic pattern that works well with many things Russian composers tend to do. Tchaikovsky's, Glinka's and Musorgski's (in 'Boris Godunov') polonaises are all about these traits (up to the level of a caricature, as some may argue). Oginsky's piece is almost the opposite. It's a depressing mumbling coupled with certain melodies/motives very familiar in Eastern-European backwaters, where folks like to cherish their bottomless victimhood and rarely miss a chance to overindulge in self-pity. The fact that this particular polonaise, written and intended to be an anti-Russia rallying cry, was chosen by Soviet ruling class as a symbol for Russian people to embrace - it's a good example of how wicked and russophobic the Soviet regime was in its core.

    • @zallandor
      @zallandor 2 месяца назад

      ​@@djmbstso much chauvinism in one comment xD

  • @gatozarin
    @gatozarin 3 года назад +14

    why isn’t your channel more well-known?? your content is SOOOOOOOOOO GOOOOOD

    • @MusicaUniversalis
      @MusicaUniversalis  3 года назад +10

      Because I haven’t uploaded enough videos. But you can always help by sharing my videos.

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      @ignaciomarlon4629 3 года назад

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      @otistheo7746 3 года назад

      @Ignacio Marlon Instablaster :)

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      @ignaciomarlon4629 3 года назад

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    • @ignaciomarlon4629
      @ignaciomarlon4629 3 года назад +1

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  • @nikolayevichmyshkin8515
    @nikolayevichmyshkin8515 7 месяцев назад +1

    aw3esome best explanation on youtube so far, beating out the with your hand really helped me understand the form. thanks

  • @melmelsmusicstudio1800
    @melmelsmusicstudio1800 10 месяцев назад +1

    Very informative musical synopsis. I'll share this with my students- thank you! A+ and Bravo! 😀

  • @PianoHugo
    @PianoHugo Год назад +3

    Excellent work! Thanks a lot for this videos. 😊

  • @caterscarrots3407
    @caterscarrots3407 3 года назад +18

    You said that the polonaise rhythm can’t be repeated throughout or that it shouldn’t. To that, I would say "What about Chopin’s Military Polonaise? Chopin does exactly that. The B section isn’t any calmer in my opinion than the A section."

    • @MusicaUniversalis
      @MusicaUniversalis  3 года назад +23

      All "rules" on form are just scaffolds. Most rules for any given form were broken at some point or another by great composers. But when you are writing your first piece in any form, it is good to have a few guidelines to follow. Even grammar has exceptions, nothing is cut and dry, especially when it comes to art, where creativity is valued above all else. The point of explaining a B section as being perhaps calmer, is to get the idea into your head that the B section should at the very least be a contrast to the A section. Chopin titled his Military Polonaise "Military" for a reason. The deviation from the standard is written right there in the title. Let's say you wrote a "Pastoral" Polonaise, I would in that case expect the A and B sections to both be calm.

  • @slubert
    @slubert 2 года назад +3

    Just a point i want to make. When discussing folk dances, a circle dance usually means a dance where a group of dancers hold hands for the majority (or throughout) of the dance, often they sing along with the dance. Most dances in fact are danced in a circle around the hall, mostly to avoid clashing together or just as part of choreography. So calling a popular 19th century "ballroom" dance a circle dance can prove to be difficult.

  • @EduardoFrigattiComposer
    @EduardoFrigattiComposer Год назад +1

    Very nice video! I'm composing a polonaise... I was very helpful. Thank you!

  • @guille____
    @guille____ 3 года назад +2

    We missed you! Nice video as always :)

  • @generalferret7129
    @generalferret7129 3 года назад +2

    Very helpful! I would love to see more of these videos :)

  • @neilwalsh3977
    @neilwalsh3977 3 года назад +6

    I am definitely a fan of 'hybrid' form

  • @xrrainx823
    @xrrainx823 3 года назад +15

    Ah Chopin, quite the champion of the Polonaise

  • @mohammadbayazid5064
    @mohammadbayazid5064 2 года назад +3

    Please do a video on Chopin Mazurka

  • @janefrancine
    @janefrancine Год назад +1

    Thank you thank you thank you!

  • @realsuperia
    @realsuperia 3 года назад +1

    Excelent video!

  • @elliot2294
    @elliot2294 3 года назад +1

    this video is amazing

  • @melmelsmusicstudio1800
    @melmelsmusicstudio1800 10 месяцев назад

    Oh and can anyone please tell me a traditional tempo for a polonaise? I counted around 90 bpm for the orchestra at Heroic 3:05. But some say allegro maestoso, and that's much faster, correct? Was there a range - depending on the audience? Like reading a crowd? Just curious your thoughts. I think most music is played too fast today- attention spans and all. Thank you!

  • @eltonwild5648
    @eltonwild5648 3 года назад +1

    Awesome!

  • @chikyushimin
    @chikyushimin 3 года назад

    great video

  • @caterscarrots3407
    @caterscarrots3407 2 года назад

    That rhythm of the Polonaise, the eighth, sixteenth, sixteenth cell followed by eighth notes, is it just me or is that very similar to the rhythm you'd find in a March, just with a meter difference?

  • @magisterparsons
    @magisterparsons 3 года назад

    Dude! What's your Patreon? This and the Folía video are gold!

    • @MusicaUniversalis
      @MusicaUniversalis  3 года назад

      Stay tuned, I'm waiting for 10,000 subscribers to set one up. I'll reach that milestone fairly soon. Thanks for your interest in supporting the channel.

    • @magisterparsons
      @magisterparsons 3 года назад

      @@MusicaUniversalis Best of luck. I'm sure you'll hit 10k any day now.

  • @christiant.8834
    @christiant.8834 3 года назад

    more videos about form please!!

    • @MusicaUniversalis
      @MusicaUniversalis  3 года назад +4

      You won’t have to wait much longer for another 😉

  • @alejandrohp99
    @alejandrohp99 2 года назад

    And what about the baroque polonaise?

  • @lyleneff
    @lyleneff 3 года назад +1

    "Form" is an inaccurate word in the title of this video The polonaise is a genre, not a form. The form (i.e.musical structure) of a polonaise, like a Strauss waltz or a Sousa march, is not its defining feature. In addition, rhythm should not be confused with form. One could compose a polonaise in the same form (structure) as a waltz, etc. Musical style is the defining factor.

    • @MusicaUniversalis
      @MusicaUniversalis  3 года назад +3

      By your definition the Minuet and Trio is not a form either. Strange that it‘s called Minuet and Trio Form in many texts. Apparently it isn’t a form at all, but a genre. Interesting theory.

  • @005422iyy
    @005422iyy 3 года назад

    01:24

  • @005422iyy
    @005422iyy 3 года назад

    03:08

  • @davidbronmeijer310
    @davidbronmeijer310 3 года назад +3

    wij vieren feest, ga weg met die malaise want het is weer tijd voor de polonaise.

    • @MusicaUniversalis
      @MusicaUniversalis  3 года назад +2

      Even though I don’t speak Dutch, I understood exactly what you wrote. I suppose speaking German helps though.

  • @NidusFormicarum
    @NidusFormicarum 2 года назад

    Really nice examples! ... except for Chopin - a composer whose music I usually cannot stand.

    • @amj.composer
      @amj.composer 2 года назад +3

      That's unfortunate, I consider Chopin a once in a million years miracle. I find it hard to find a better composer and melodist than him.

    • @shylockwesker5530
      @shylockwesker5530 9 месяцев назад

      I would be rather tough discussing polonaise and omitting Chopin. Imagune the outrage. Like talking about the Fugue and not saying Bach.

  • @donut3142
    @donut3142 3 года назад +1

    O shit legit 13 seconds from upload