Tristesse - is the title misleading? Chopin Etude Op.10 No.3

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  • Опубликовано: 18 сен 2021
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Комментарии • 548

  • @heartofthekeys
    @heartofthekeys  2 года назад +60

    Which tempo did you prefer for this Etude - and why? 😊 Tell me in the comments! ❤️
    And don’t forget:
    The first 1,000 people to use this link will get a 1 month free trial of Skillshare: skl.sh/heartofthekeys09211

    • @nat91307
      @nat91307 2 года назад

      hi

    • @theroninpianist4443
      @theroninpianist4443 2 года назад +4

      The slow tempo one has a feeling of nostalgia because that's what I am used to listen since childhood. The fast sounds totally different, like it can easily be transported to salsa or bossa nova.

    • @cantplaypiano7971
      @cantplaypiano7971 2 года назад +4

      I think the piece sounds wonderful at eights = 80
      100 sounds a little bit too rushed, 50... well, it sounds sad, but almost as if you couldnt breath

    • @yasmine1076.
      @yasmine1076. 2 года назад +1

      Please can you do beethoven sonata no.17 tempest 3rd movement ❤❤❤

    • @MI7DJT
      @MI7DJT 2 года назад

      I prefer at 80 rather than 100 tempo.. maybe I've been conditioned to hearing it slower? Is it sad that I know this piece primarily from Serge Gainsbourg?

  • @imageaware
    @imageaware 2 года назад +74

    The final tempo had the greatest emotional impact on me. I've always loved this etude and you play it beautifully.

  • @diegocifuentes4762
    @diegocifuentes4762 6 месяцев назад +10

    Omg Annique... Since I heard this piece for the first time i never felt that connection everybody seems to have with this etude, and I never understood why. It was kind of frustrating. But today, as soon as you began to play whith Chopin's tempo, I literally felt in love (I even cried). I finally understood that what my heart wanted all this time was what Chopin's heart wanted. And that is thanks to you. I'm only 15 years old and you've managed to connect me with the 24 etudes for the rest of my life. I hope that one day i will be able to play them! Thanks Annique, thanks.

  • @alicemenassa9031
    @alicemenassa9031 2 года назад +110

    I absolutely love this piece, I think it is my favorite of all time. I actually like several tempos for it. I like one of Horowitz's interpretation (not the super fast one but he still goes faster than most pianists) and also Lang Lang's interpretation. But to be honest, I could never find an interpretation that fully convinces me. I always feel like these wonderful performances are missing something. That this piece has still beauty in it that they couldn't set free. Don't get me wring, I absolutely love these two pianists but this specific piece... feels incomplete.
    As a French person, I want to add that "tristesse" is not supposed to mean "super sad and depressing". I mean if you look up in the dictionnary sure, you'll get something that basically means depressing. But words often have a different definition than what is written in dictionnary. You know, when I was in high school, in French class, we were asked to describe the mental state of a book character who had just lost her child. We said "she is sad" and the teacher corrected us : "no she is not. Sad is too soft, it isn't what you feel when you lose your child." I think "Tristesse" is a very dangerous feeling or "état d'âme" as we say. Because, precisely, it's soft and you don't know right away it is tristesse when you feel it. It's close to nostalgia, to regret. It's almost like calm, like peace ; it's pure. It's a serene blue sky.
    For me, it is exactly what this piece is. When I listened to it for this first time, all was going well for me and I didn't really have reasons to have nostalgia or regret. I just felt this immense peace. I liked this Etude, but it didn't leave a mark on me.
    Then I listened to it for the second time. I sobbed my heart out. This time I had nostalgia, this time I had regret, this time I had to say goodbye to something dear to me. I listened to it another time. And another time. In fact, I spent my entire afternoon with it, crying and crying until I was feeling empty. I still could feel the peace. But oh how the peace was dangerous. Oh how this beauty, this supreme grace, was dangerous. The editors wanted to name it "Farewell". I think it fits well too. When I think about Chopin writing it, I think he was remembering Poland... But not Poland"s fate like for the Revolutionary, not the idea of Poland, but his family, his city, Tytus' house where he spent holidays, his deceased sister Emilia, his home. The beauty of all the good moments he spent, that build all the unbearable nostalgia he felt.

    • @SeaRasp
      @SeaRasp 2 года назад +6

      I’m also french and I was thinking the same thing. When I think of “tristesse” I don’t think of depression or extreme sadness, I like the way you explained it

    • @vprajapa
      @vprajapa 2 года назад +1

      I would love to hear your reaction to JJ Bun Li interpretation of it in Chopin competition first round stage.

    • @verak6058
      @verak6058 2 года назад +2

      Thank you for your explanation, this is why i love reading yt comments

    • @RUT812
      @RUT812 Год назад

      Thanks for the metronome speed!

    • @petroglyph888mcgregor2
      @petroglyph888mcgregor2 Год назад +1

      When you wrote: "I could never find an interpretation that fully convinces me", that reminded me of something the pianist Tiffany Poon once said. I don't have the exact quote, but she basically said that she never heard an interpretation of Tristesse that sounds as good as the version she hears in her head.

  • @HollowDeathful
    @HollowDeathful 2 года назад +103

    Never actually have heard or played this piece in a faster tempo but I actually kinda dig it! Also lovely playing :)

    • @samt8415
      @samt8415 2 года назад

      I've heard it with that tempo in "piano tiles 2" and I was surprised that that was the tempo with which Chopin wrote it.

    • @samt8415
      @samt8415 2 года назад

      @Harry McLaren ah, thanks

  • @elmzottin2283
    @elmzottin2283 2 года назад +75

    If you translate tristesse to sadness , it makes only a bit of sense. Yet tristesse in French has an extremely broad meaning, but most of all it is definitely not desperation or something as strong. It is actually a "light" term. In French poetry (and in daily lives) you can have with expressions such as "douce tristesse" ("sweet sadness") implying the fact that tristesse for us can also be something we like to feel, something we see as beautiful. I guess the French critics who gave that name were thinking about tristesse in this way. It is difficult to explain as we come to nuances in the French language combined with a translation to English but I hope it gave another element of explanation. And thanks for the videos you make ! I always enjoy it !

    • @arthurguy3061
      @arthurguy3061 2 года назад +9

      As a Français my self, let me juste instruct people that « tristesse » really means sadness to us, no need to strech things with hypothetical context and shit cmon

    • @elmzottin2283
      @elmzottin2283 2 года назад +10

      "La mélancolie est un crépuscule. La souffrance s'y fond dans une sombre joie. La mélancolie, c'est le bonheur d'être triste." Victor Hugo. Ce n'est qu'un exemple parmi d'autres mais il est dommage d'être à ce point réducteur pour langue aussi riche. À bon entendeur l'ami.

    • @elmzottin2283
      @elmzottin2283 2 года назад +8

      Je rajouterai par la même occasion que s'en tenir au sens premier des mots, et en l'occurrence des sentiments, pour tenter de décrire les morceaux de la période romantique serait criminel. Comment qualifier la sensation procurée lors de la coda de la 3eme ballade de Chopin ? D'un style typiquement slave, on ressent de la joie et de la tristesse simultanément, ce serait impossible d'utiliser ces deux termes en même temps dans leur définition première, on aurait un grossier oxymore. La langue français est riche, belle, subtile et pleine de nuances. Tâchons au moins de faire vivre cette richesse qui en fait sa renommée...

    • @cherylcuttineau7916
      @cherylcuttineau7916 8 месяцев назад +1

      As a retired English teacher whose family is French, I truly enjoyed your insights into language and poetry. Merci beaucoup !

  • @MT-ys6ju
    @MT-ys6ju 2 года назад +7

    This has always been one of my favourite pieces. I used to study piano in my teens and sadly stopped. Now I'm 41 years old and I bought myself a digital piano, looking to start again. Thank you for your videos!

  • @marklowry4431
    @marklowry4431 2 года назад +14

    One of my favorite pieces, but I always found the transition between the first part and the "poco pui animato" part really jarring in most interpretations. Yours is much smoother, and I really enjoyed it!

    • @luponl997
      @luponl997 2 года назад +2

      Poco più* animato

  • @24colorsoft
    @24colorsoft 2 года назад +95

    The "fast" version is the most beautiful thing I've ever heard! Would you please consider making a full recording of the piece at that tempo 🥰🙏🏼

    • @shreksthongg
      @shreksthongg 2 года назад +2

      That may be a tall order, considering the faster portion in the middle. I think she can do it, but it would probably be very difficult.

    • @tryinganna9883
      @tryinganna9883 2 года назад +2

      @@shreksthongg speed is not a problem on piano at that level lol when I was learning piano I didn't play any music I just played technique exercises and I would play 1/16th notes at 80bpm which is fast lmao (pressing a key every 0.18 seconds) seconds she definitely also did her exercises to this level and I can play quicker but 1/16 notes at 80 BPM is good enough it's fast enough for any piece a lot of music isn't as quick as it seems when actually sat down and played

    • @davikersulks9525
      @davikersulks9525 2 года назад +6

      @@tryinganna9883 just playing an exercise like hanon is diferent the middle part has technichal dificulties, and also with the tempo

    • @Whatismusic123
      @Whatismusic123 8 дней назад

      Horowitz's recording has the correct tempo

  • @flakelorenz6284
    @flakelorenz6284 2 года назад +31

    I think it’s pretty cool how much the tempo changes how this piece sounds, the mood is completely different between the slow and fast versions. I wonder if it’s also true for other pieces

    • @knasigboll
      @knasigboll 2 года назад +1

      Jolene by Dolly Parton sounds great when slowed down. There is a video of a 7” single, which is supposed to be played at 45 rpm, being played at the regular 33 rpm that is amazing and kind of haunting.

  • @julia815645219
    @julia815645219 2 года назад +3

    These videos are amazing!!! I can’t wait for more Chopin interpretation talk-throughs!

  • @lpure_bonesl132
    @lpure_bonesl132 2 года назад +14

    I like this interpretation far more than the other ones I’ve heard, thankyou for tge beautiful playing.

  • @taberbooth9203
    @taberbooth9203 2 года назад +3

    This is by far my favorite piano channel! Thank you so much for the vids

  • @easkay
    @easkay 2 года назад +27

    I really liked your interpretation, and the tempo you used for the performance fits so nicely. :)
    I've yet to learn this piece, but I'm looking forward to incorporating these ideas. You have my sympathies about interruptions as well :D

  • @edwardwung1754
    @edwardwung1754 Год назад

    LOVE, LOVE, LOVE your rendition! I am learning to play this song right now. Your perspective and interpretation is very helpful. Thank you very much.

  • @VyacheslavGryaznovPiano
    @VyacheslavGryaznovPiano 2 года назад +13

    Yep, the final tempo sounds the most convincing! Absolutely agree about not being too slow. Wonderful and very useful analysis, thank you. And great playing!

  • @kylemiller3386
    @kylemiller3386 2 года назад +2

    Great video! I was just discussing this piece with someone yesterday about this very same issue. To me, it has never sounded like sadness. It is so much more than that. It is true it contains melancholy, but it is also very warm and passionate. Simply calling it sadness limits you from the real depth of emotions the piece brings. Thanks so much for the amazing content!

  • @dharmamuthalagappan5157
    @dharmamuthalagappan5157 2 года назад +3

    I can’t believe it! I requested this video on your last Chopin etude video and you actually made it! This has made my day - thank you so much ;) From an aspiring 17 year old pianist :)

  • @worldsbestkiwi1097
    @worldsbestkiwi1097 2 года назад +2

    Huugee congrats on reaching 100k! Please keep putting out amazing content

  • @matheusrocha8731
    @matheusrocha8731 2 года назад +89

    Yes, the name "tristesse" never made sense for me. This etude sounds totally happy for me. After all, it is in a major key! Sad I would call the prelude 4 of Op. 28. Actually, I don't care much about these nick names. Would generally think in the pieces by their opus number.

    • @pretzelkch8322
      @pretzelkch8322 2 года назад +6

      Further proven by Chopin never giving any of his Etudes nicknames. However, I like the other name the etude sometimes goes by "L' Adieu" or "Farewell" as I think it fits much more.

    • @musicman8938
      @musicman8938 2 года назад +20

      A piece being in a major key doesn't mean happy. The oversimplification of major being happy and minor being sad needs to go away. This etude sounds sad to me. What makes a song or a piece sad is its intervals in my perspective.

    • @matheusrocha8731
      @matheusrocha8731 2 года назад +7

      @@musicman8938 I didn't mean to imply that major key is necessary and sufficient for a piece to be perceived as happy. I even thought to make this caveat in my comment, to avoid people to think that I'm implying that.
      The major key usual progressions involving I, IV, V and ii (as a replacement of IV) tend to sound happy. But in major key one can always modulate to the relative or the parallel minor and use lots of minor chords, which can sound sad.
      Besides, everything influences in the perceived mood, from the key, tempo, dynamics, chords and progressions to the subjective interpretation of the listener.
      Moreover, happy and sad are only two of the many moods that music can evoque. Many pieces don't sound neither happy nor sad.
      The claim that minor key always sounds sad is even less valid.
      A good example of mostly sad or melancholic piece in a major key is the second mvt of Ravel's famous piano concerto (at least in my perception). I think some parts sound optimistic, though (e.g., the ending). Clair de Lune is another good example.

    • @olive4359
      @olive4359 2 года назад +2

      @@pretzelkch8322 Critics gave the études nicknames

    • @elias7748
      @elias7748 2 года назад

      I really dislike the names given to his pieces. The only one's I like are the ones given to his polonaises, because they actually make sense.

  • @db0we
    @db0we 2 года назад

    I just switched to a music major leaning towards music therapy and piano has been my main instrument but only been playing for a year and a half. I love that you go into such detail in your videos and apply the analyzation to the piece. It is very inspiring. Thank you:)

  • @ANeo-qc3sz
    @ANeo-qc3sz 2 года назад

    love your tempo! your explanation helps me realized the importance to consider both the intention of composer and the interpretation of the pianist. Thanks for the beautiful play!

  • @gracenotes5379
    @gracenotes5379 2 года назад +1

    I loved your interpretation - all your choices made musical and emotional sense to me, and you had ample technique to present the musical flow with grace and subtlety. Thank you for sharing this!

  • @walterdavid1971
    @walterdavid1971 2 года назад

    Perfect! The song No Other Love... i understand was lifted from that Chopin masterpiece... Magnificent! Just love it... the way you're playing it... Posture and all... and slow motion llifting of your fingers off the keys at the end... Is just so charming!

  • @gavinli2443
    @gavinli2443 2 года назад

    Awesome video, really looking forward to learning more about Chopin's Etudes!!!!!!!!

  • @yvonneeshi
    @yvonneeshi 2 года назад +8

    lmao the last scene with your dad is just so cute 😂

  • @jb8866
    @jb8866 2 года назад +15

    Ooof another interesting topic. Guess I'll be watching this tomorrow 😅

  • @univibe23
    @univibe23 2 года назад +2

    I've never thought of this piece as sad as much as just so beautiful! It almost brought me to tears the first time I heard it, not of sadness but joy.

  • @glen8148
    @glen8148 2 года назад +1

    I think your tempo is spot on, I had no idea about the original differences you demonstrated, but I must say that I always thought it was slightly to slow in the intrepretations that I had heard before. Thank you for the performance, just wonderful.

  • @Goozalo
    @Goozalo Год назад

    I used to play this piece for my grandma when I was a kid. Listening in this tempo, bring me joy and happy memories. I will practice it and gave it to my gran ma for her birthday. Thank you for showing an alternative view, more colorful. Greetings from Chile

  • @mige2830
    @mige2830 2 года назад

    I loved it... thank you for this review and tips..so clean

  • @craigdeshong1180
    @craigdeshong1180 2 года назад +5

    I’ve heard this etude played in a variety of tempi but I agree with you that it needs a bit more speed than that which it is usually played. I’ve heard this etude played at a tempo that turned it into a dirge. I especially love your interpretation. A special note on the last crescendo where you’ve borrowed a bit of Beethoven and crescendo to….. nothing! A lovely treatment that really makes your finale to the etude stand out from the herd.

  • @burmashave
    @burmashave Год назад

    Love your tempo on this, and that you spent the time to research it. Thanks!

  • @zucalignacio
    @zucalignacio 2 года назад

    Amazing!! You have played the exact tempo for me. I loved it.

  • @buepichi
    @buepichi 2 года назад +2

    Thanks for this video. It was hard for me to find the "sadness" in this piece to be able to interpret it and your explanation gave it another meaning. Sorry my english, i'm using a translator

  • @jamesbow5916
    @jamesbow5916 2 года назад

    Great video! Love your tempo and interpretation

  • @nymphadora7773
    @nymphadora7773 2 года назад +2

    Ur hand movements and amazing!!!

  • @vivianpanmin
    @vivianpanmin 2 года назад

    This is one of my favorite Chopin pieces. I enjoyed watching your video. Very fun and entertaining 😊 Excellent performance 👍Good luck for your final exam!

  • @benardaozturk
    @benardaozturk 2 года назад

    I love the way you think about pieces and listen those ideas!

  • @victorinojohncarlo7069
    @victorinojohncarlo7069 2 года назад +3

    Congratulations on the 100k! Well deserved silver play button ❤️

  • @moy9022
    @moy9022 10 месяцев назад

    Thanks for sharing this piece, it's one of my favorite
    ❤❤

  • @khdayskh1314
    @khdayskh1314 3 месяца назад

    I just want you to know, I'm using your fingering as reference rn and it's already making a HUGE difference in my control of the melody.
    I finally just started learning this one after putting it off for a near decade (havent played piano since high school) and am using Schirmer/Arthur Friedheim's revised edition off of Amazon. Lots of 4s and 5s for the fingering of the melody. Switching to 2s and 3s has already made the melody so much stronger incomparison, and im still only on the first page!
    Without your technique i feel i would have struggled to bring out the voice of my absolute favorite piano song with my weak af pinkies! Thank you!!!

  • @marcosorigamiandcrafts3120
    @marcosorigamiandcrafts3120 11 месяцев назад

    All of the tempos are amazing for me and it all sounds beautiful. Thank you for this video

  • @gabriellarkin3873
    @gabriellarkin3873 2 года назад +2

    yayy my favourite etude, I've been waiting for this one

  • @celialampe8232
    @celialampe8232 2 года назад

    Thank you, I mean THANK YOU for your insights and comments on this Etude. I played it years ago, and hope to get back to playing it again. All best wishes from New Zealand! (I am English but married a New Zealander and came here to live, years ago).

  • @mortonbaychestnut4072
    @mortonbaychestnut4072 2 года назад +1

    Beautifully played... thank you!!

  • @mariobaylao824
    @mariobaylao824 2 года назад

    Amazing!!! Thanks for all the insights!!!

  • @ludwigvanbeethoven2416
    @ludwigvanbeethoven2416 2 года назад

    Yay 100,000 subscribers! Congratulations

  • @juandyu9476
    @juandyu9476 2 года назад +1

    I prepared this study for my grad concert, but slow around 75 to 80. To me, it sounds like a nostalgic sadness at the beginning, kind of like a happy nostalgic memory at the tempo change, it grows into something that reminds me of a tantrum until the end of the sixths, that part just before returning to the main theme I try to imitate someone sobbing, trying to calm down after the tantrum, and finally returning to that introspective sadness but this time you let it fade away until it is gone.
    Edit: I didn't know it was called Tristesse until a month or two before recording my concert, so to me it was a surprise. But I think it is a piece that passes through a path of remembering, crying, sobbing, screaming, calming, remembering and letting go.

  • @HeybrajanTamariz
    @HeybrajanTamariz 2 года назад

    I really love your videos! Greetings From Costa Rica!

  • @MrGladstone1968
    @MrGladstone1968 6 месяцев назад

    Congratulações pela execução dessa belíssima peça de Chopin.

  • @ultimore
    @ultimore 5 месяцев назад

    This was very useful. I enjoyed your performance. Fascinating to consider that the composer once notated it to be vivace / lively.

  • @renansuguimoto3400
    @renansuguimoto3400 17 часов назад

    Just the video I needed! Really great!

  • @blalab8402
    @blalab8402 2 года назад

    So wonderfull😍 thank you for this video🙏

  • @Gaming_Groove
    @Gaming_Groove 2 года назад

    I think the more important than the specific tempo is the use of appropriate stress and rubato to give the piece movement. I almost wonder if people going overboard with this is how we ended up with the A section too slow and the B section far too fast. I'm certainly no expert, I dropped out of my music education program for life reasons and haven't been in that world for about 15 years, but that's how I've always felt about this piece. I will say though, the way you perform it is exactly how I've always imagined it should be. This is now my favorite recording of my favorite Chopin work, so thank you for that. =)

  • @Robbypax
    @Robbypax 2 года назад +4

    The tempi you chose when you played the etude at the end of your video were absolutely well balanced and perfect ! Yours is one of the finest interpretations I have ever heard.Congratulations !
    Yes, it is not a sad piece; however, I feel it is melancholic and I believe it fully expresses the nature of Chopin’s soul.

  • @Quotenwagnerianer
    @Quotenwagnerianer 2 года назад +9

    All titles for Chopins' etudes are misleading. Because none of them come from him. He did not name a single one.

  • @christineroberts6759
    @christineroberts6759 2 года назад

    A beautiful piece and a beautiful performance. Thank you.

  • @richardcommins4926
    @richardcommins4926 2 года назад

    Bravo for your interpretation of this piece. I really enjoyed your playing and tempo. Music is more that just a collection of notes. Music conveys human emotions like passion, love, anger, regret, longing and many other emotions. This is why when you hear computer created music, the emotional part of the music is missing because a computer does not feel emotions. For example, a waltz. There needs to be that flow to the music, the 1, 2, 3 and 1, 2, 3. If played to fast, people can't keep up and when played to slow, well, it just loses something and is not real. This Chopin Etude is conveying an emotion of elation and joy that people should be feeling. The speed is most important to the enjoyment of this feeling. I think you nailed the tempo correctly and are feeling what Chopin was trying to convey in his music.

  • @neilfordan
    @neilfordan 2 года назад +1

    I still like it slower like most of the recordings. The melody feels like the songs you hear where the music is happy but the content is really sad. I love the version you made at the end. 😊

  • @bigsangano
    @bigsangano Год назад +1

    The slower tempo is nicer 52 I love this this piece faster part in the middle always reminds me of someone who's crying.

  • @onleej7813
    @onleej7813 2 года назад +2

    This is the best version I ever ever ever ever.....heard of Chopin Etude Op10,No.3! I love the lovely tempo!

  • @RubeySurya
    @RubeySurya 2 года назад +21

    hai Annique 🌹 I always support your channel, I followed your previous channel and instagram so far. Good luck to you, because there's no reason not to like your piano playing.

  • @monistefmontesdeleon5238
    @monistefmontesdeleon5238 2 года назад +1

    Thank you for your wonderful explanation and interpretation of this piece!
    I play this piece myself too; it also means a lot to me personally, and I agree with you that the name given to it does not decribe this piece. Playing it too slowly is like adding way too much sugar to it, it becomes sticky and unbalanced.
    I play it at about the same tempo as you play it, which is much faster than a lot of recordings but I like it much better like that. Also, the first part is not sad at all! The middle part is neither sad, it‘s passionate, agitated and even a bit brutal at the climax but not sad! The piece beginns with a good mood, gets into a big turmoil and has a conciliatory end. But sadness? no, not really, unless you want to bury it under a ton of sugar 😉.

  • @heinzneto2121
    @heinzneto2121 2 года назад +1

    Your interpretation is so beautiful! Could you post a separate video only with the part where you are playing so that we can listen to it in loop?😅

  • @atatdotdot
    @atatdotdot 2 года назад

    What an odd coincidence! As it happens, my nine-year-old, who's just started learning to play, was going through all the demos on our digital piano and listening to this piece on it this morning; I couldn't remember what it was, though I knew it was Chopin, so searched for it, and downloaded the score to show her, and had a little go at the first section. I was astonished at how much more difficult to play it is than it sounds! I guess the pedagogic point with this étude is being able to play a tune crisply all on 4 and 5 while keeping the rocking accompaniment beneath it smooth on 1 and 2 and so on. And then your video showed up!
    I love the quaver = 80 tempo, btw.
    Tiny point of English - the printed book with the dots in it is called "the score", not "the scores".

  • @raleedy
    @raleedy 2 года назад +4

    The right tempo is one at which you can sing the melody with good phrasing. You hit it.

  • @micheldupaul7768
    @micheldupaul7768 2 года назад

    Une très belle interprétation de cette magnifique étude. Merci !

  • @Li-yt7zh
    @Li-yt7zh 2 года назад +1

    Since editions vary with quarter or 8th note = 80-100, I like to determine a middle section speed and adjust my tempo around that (keeping the beat more or less the same thought the piece). I'm really glad this video was made - I can just send ppl this way now when I,m feeling too lazy to debate every point :P. Despite a strong association with rubato, Chopin was a "stickler" about keeping a steady beat and being subtle with rhythmic dynamicism. I like to think he would have approved TY for the concise vid!!! :D

  • @yagvtt
    @yagvtt 2 года назад +13

    Your final tempo is very good and you play this etude wonderfuly :-)
    Just in case, there's a historical theory that is called the "double beat theory" which says that metronomic indications should be read twice slower today because at the time of Chopin and Beethoven they were counting 1 beat when we count 2 (they were adding 1 every two beats of the metronom, for example only when it bounces on the left side). So 100 for chopin would be our current 50.
    There are many very good arguments in favor of this theory, and also many good arguments against it so it is quite controversial.
    But whether it's right or wrong is not very important imho, the interesting part is that it makes us rethink how we hear this music, and very often, taking (what we hear today as) a super slow tempo is a wonderful way to rediscover the music we are so familiar with.

  • @suntexi
    @suntexi 2 года назад

    I think you have it spot on. I tried to play this piece but it's so difficult for me. I started out slow and the middle was even slower. My piano teacher was always getting me to play difficult stuff; Liszt's Liebesträume was another. I didn't come close to mastering that either.

  • @jorgerivas1424
    @jorgerivas1424 2 года назад +2

    I always play the tempo you use at 8:11, lento ma non troppo, because that's the way I've heard it played most often and that's the way I feel the piece. It is also closer to a normal heartbeat rhythm. Music follows the rhythm of nature and this piece is intuitively closely aligned with that rhythm. It also makes for more contrast with the poco piu animato. Those are just my uneducated thoughts. I'm just a cello-playing pianist. I love your interpretation.

  • @maureenshaw737
    @maureenshaw737 12 дней назад

    If the tempo was vivace…I can imagine the central part would be a bit like carrying a large basket of washing down the stairs backwards. Extra marks for not dropping any!
    You play so beautifully Annique ❤

  • @daniellisowski4919
    @daniellisowski4919 2 года назад

    The three last phrases of that
    Statement section without
    Being trestisaes ?? (Spelling)
    Work so well , to lift your spirit
    To believe in what your doing.
    Thank you anique !!!

  • @brucecrane9605
    @brucecrane9605 2 года назад +3

    Chopin would be pleased that someone got it right. That was beautiful.

  • @johnnyp6202
    @johnnyp6202 2 года назад +1

    Quite like the temp you finally chose but would be interested to hear the whole thing at 100. Probably my favorite Etude. I suspect if we had an opportunity to hear Chopin actually play his own music many would be very disappointed.

  • @blacknd1218
    @blacknd1218 2 года назад

    what a great interpretation ! and yeah you're right about the names given to the pieces..the only thing that I'm fond of in those titles is that they're more memorable than the typical classical music titles

  • @firstclasspassenger
    @firstclasspassenger 2 года назад +1

    My FAVORITE piece indeed!

  • @hanshi3831
    @hanshi3831 Год назад

    Idil Biret's is my favorite interpretation. It feels very close to the 80bpm version you played. Nostalgic and longing, yet still pretty and sweet. The tempo feels right for the stormy parts of the piece, as well.

  • @vivanudrack1061
    @vivanudrack1061 2 года назад

    Now I returned to play the piano and I'm exciting to learn about the classical pieces, that's beautiful songs

  • @Dany-hu7bj
    @Dany-hu7bj 2 года назад

    thank you for this !

  • @Likeafoxow
    @Likeafoxow Год назад

    Beautiful!

  • @bigsangano
    @bigsangano Год назад

    U play it so beautifully

  • @edivaldo66
    @edivaldo66 2 года назад +5

    The 100 bpm sounds like the nightcore version of the 52 bpm. There's a whole new atmosfere when you change the tempo that much, I listen to certain interpretations depending on my mood, so I can't tell wich I prefer overall. I think this is a case wich the composer went "let's see how they will play" and there's no strictly way to play defined.

  •  2 года назад +5

    9:47 - 10:02 I have never heard this part played like that. Which editions are you using? Two passages are completely different from the standard editions or performances.

  • @chopinplayedsimply
    @chopinplayedsimply 9 месяцев назад

    Great video!
    I think a lot of times Chopin's music is over-celebrated at the expense of just enjoying the music. After all Chopin's music was enjoyable to both educated and uneducated, rich and poor (according to M. A. Szulc). He also sometimes played for people to dance.
    Even his Nocturne op. 9 no 2, now played in a sad way, was described as "cheerful" (in Polish "pogodny") in 1879 by Jan Kleczyński - which shows how much Chopin's interpretations have changed over time.
    He also had a great sense of humour which you can see in his letters, but also e.g. in the fact that he assigned tempo=69 to some of his pieces - but his sense of humour is also lost in today's interpretations.
    Once again thanks for the great video!

  • @gabyl2326
    @gabyl2326 2 года назад

    I never checked out the scores of this etude before so the tempo is totally new to me, really interesting !

  • @MrYngwieglenn
    @MrYngwieglenn 2 года назад +3

    Hello . Thanks for your interprétation. Are you sure about the chords at 9:50 and 9:58 ? Or are there several versions of this part ?

  • @7phyton
    @7phyton 5 месяцев назад

    Wonderful video about one of the most beautiful piano compositions and how a musician ought to work out how to perform. Love it. Something to consider that is not mentioned is the difference between the piano of Chopin's day and the modern piano. They sound quite different and specifically in ways that affect choice of tempo. I once visited a musical instrument museum, in Berlin I think, and one of the attendants played several of the historic pianos for me (obviously visitors are not allowed). In particular one from Schubert's day, and he played the piano part of the song Der Leiermann (Winterreise). The sound and effect was completely different from a modern piano, and this affects the choice of tempo. So, a tempo of 100 might have a similar emotional effect on a Chopin-era piano as 75 or 80 has on a modern one. (Which would be roughly my choice of tempo.) A good follow-up video would be one about No. 2 and No. 4 and how their context might be considered for how to play No. 3. Thanks!

  • @richardarcher3435
    @richardarcher3435 Год назад

    I've always loved Chopin since I was about 8. It's strange that he gave it such a fast tempo and I agree with you, many people play it too slow. I also think people tend to do too much rubato with the main tune, but rubato is just so subjective. I liked the speed you played it. If the software you use allows you to adjust volumes I highly recommend you adjust the volume of the piano relative to your voice. I couldn't hear the piano and had to have my cursor ready on the volume control :)

  • @derpydudes7814
    @derpydudes7814 2 года назад +5

    I actually think the 100 tempo is the best, never heard this before so fresh ears but it sounds better

    • @TheDarkzHD
      @TheDarkzHD 2 года назад

      Its very interesting how habit forces us in one ‘true’ path! I’ve only ever listened (or played) this piece at probably around 60 bpm - very slow and romantic. Kind of crazy to hear a first time listener give their input!

    • @24colorsoft
      @24colorsoft 2 года назад +1

      This was the first time I heard the piece as well and I totally agree! The fast version is amazingly beautiful and so happy!

  • @colin_d_smith
    @colin_d_smith 2 года назад

    Hmmm... how to balance between Vivace ma non troppo and Andante ma non troppo? I guess, as you say, if you look at it in the context of the Opus as opposed to going by the later ascription of some editor that might give a clue. In any case, I think you nailed it at the end. Sounded great to me. Beautifully played. 😀

  • @murdo_mck
    @murdo_mck 2 года назад +1

    Thank you, I did not know the tempo could (should?) be fast. Another piece which has suffered in this way is Beethoven's Op 27 No 2 first movement, though the effect it seems to me is the opposite. Played at 60 bpm (1/4 note) it is a funeral march (Fischer, Schiff) full of grief; at 40 bpm we have serene beauty matching the nickname applied to it later.
    BTW Marten Noorduin's thesis "Beethoven's Tempo Indications" might be a useful resource for a performer; he has collated all the available evidence and made it free to download.

    • @elias7748
      @elias7748 2 года назад +1

      Also Etude Op. 10 No. 6, which has a tempo marking at 69. Which is probably 4 times faster compared to what people actually play.

  • @bastetmus
    @bastetmus 2 года назад

    I totally agree with you! I also play this piece at this tempo. But I'm a little confused with bars 30, 31, 34, 35 it seems I haven't the sames alterations 😶

  • @RolandHuettmann
    @RolandHuettmann 2 года назад

    Great video and lovely performance. 😎😎😎 There is a Cartot edition indicating tempo 100 for a half note. Nevertheless, I am also playing somewhere between 70-80. It was my first Etude from Chopin. The last notes in the main melody çould eventually a bit hold back for some milliseconds to give them place for listeners to fill in.

  • @micheltoscano5880
    @micheltoscano5880 Год назад

    A song to remember ( Chopin movie)! Sang alot in 40s, 50s in Europe. French, Italian etc. Nice video thank you 🙏

  • @chengqinglow4034
    @chengqinglow4034 11 месяцев назад

    Ahhh i love the 100bpm one!!

  • @shreksthongg
    @shreksthongg 2 года назад

    It's funny, I totally agreed with everything you were saying, but when you played the piece, I actually did feel really sad when I was listening to it. That fast part in the middle sounds to me like someone crying out in despair. When it calms down immediately after, it feels eerily peaceful, as if giving up and accepting fate.

  • @patrickdarrellobrien1381
    @patrickdarrellobrien1381 2 года назад

    I agree that it is played way to slow these days. However, I liked your take on the speed. It’s a beautiful melody but not a funeral song. Really liking your videos. Keep them coming.

  • @KeithSATX
    @KeithSATX 2 месяца назад

    Interesting, just a couple seconds in duration from Yunchan Lim’s, which seems slower. Maybe it’s his slightest of hesitation. Both renditions are masterful! Love your channel keep up the wonderful content and delivery😊