- Ballade No. 4 (Chopin)
The Ballade No. 4 in F minor, Op. 52 is the fourth of Polish composer
Frédéric Chopin 's ballades for solopiano . It was composed in 1842 inParis ,France andNohant , France and revised in 1843. This work was dedicated to the wife of Baron Nathaniel de RothschildSee the Incipits and Descriptions from the Official Polish Chopin Site: cite web|title=Fryderyk Chopin: Lista utworow|url=http://www.chopin.pl/dzielo/incypity_en.html|accessdate=2008-06-20] , who had invited Chopin to play in her Parisian estate and introduced him to the aristocracy and nobility. [ [http://www.ourchopin.com/music1.html Chopin: Complete Music Analysis] ]This ballade is considered by many to be the most musically intense and technically demanding of Chopin's compositions and requires exceptional pianistic skills and virtuosity in order to be performed at an appropriate level of quality.
Form
This ballade, like the other three ballades, is set in compound duple time. There are 239 bars.
tructure
A phrase, marked "piano", in the dominant key opens the seven introductory measures, and leads into the first subject of Sonata-form exposition, a melody with Slavonic coloration. The first subject undergoes four cumulative transformations, inclusive of decorations, intense countermelodies (which lead into the second subject, a lilting chordal passage), counterpoint and a nocturne-like
fioritura . [Chopin: Profile of his Music: Extended Forms: Ballades, Scherzos and Fantasies]The development of the second subject in between and after the appearances of the first subject and its transformations heighten the complexity of the musical structure and builds tension, which lead into a turbulent stretto section. After a momentary calm of 5 pianissimo chords, the music leads into a
bravura Coda, which is characterised by intensive polyphony (which makes the music seem as if two to three voices are playing simultaneously) and technical severity.Chopin has demonstrated that, in the simultaneous development of these two subjects, he has effectively synthesized a new genre which combines the use of
sonata form andtheme and variations . [ [http://www.chopin.org/index.php?page=HowToPlayChopin5 How to Play Chopin: Chopin's Ballades] , Prof. Regina Smendzianka] It is said that this interwoven development of subjects in the Ballade represents the synthesis of stylistic characters and is a refinement on contemporary improvisation in Chopin's time. [Chopin: Profile of his Music: Extended Forms: Ballades, Scherzos and Fantasies]cale
As a result of the large scale of this work and its complexity of form, coupled with the fact there are large developmental passages, there is a tendency for this work to be played with an episodic quality, lacking sense of structure and direction, as compared to the other ballades. [Michael Young, Richard Markham, The Associated Board of the Royal Schools of Music] [ [http://www.ivanmoravec.net/albums/al-cdx7908.html Ivan Moravec/Chopin Synopses] ]
The Fourth Ballade is also widely considered to be the longest of the four ballades, the first coming in second in length. A typical performance can last anywhere between 9 minutes and 30 seconds (e.g.
Alfred Cortot ) to 12 minutes (e.g.Ivan Moravec ).Comparison to Other Ballades
The Ballades are all unified in their use of compound duple time, with the only exception being the First ballade, which begins and ends in 4/4 timing. The ballades may have been inspired by a reading of
Adam Mickiewicz 's poems. Rather than a musical paraphrase of selections of text from these poems, Chopin's ballades reflect the common spirit of patriotism towardsPoland which he and Mickiewicz shared and cherished. [Foreword, The Ballads of Chopin, Salabert Editions]The distinguishing features of the Fourth Ballade are that the Fourth is more subtle and contrapuntal in nature. The Fourth has fewer outbursts than the other three ballades, and most of its volume occurs in the last part of the piece, as the coda nears. The contrapuntal qualities found so abundantly in the Fourth appear rarely in the first three. [Ballade No. 4, The Ballads of Chopin, Salabert Editions]
Trivia
*
John Ogdon once said of the Fourth Ballade: " [It] is the most exalted, intense and sublimely powerful of all Chopin's compositions... It is unbelievable that it lasts only twelve minutes, for it contains the experience of a lifetime." [ [http://www.chopinmusic.net/en/works/ballades/ Chopin Music: Ballades] ]
*According to Robert Schumann, the writing of the Fourth Ballade was inspired by a reading ofAdam Mickiewicz ' poem "The Three Budrys."
*This piece can be heard quietly playing in "The Bourne Supremacy " whileMatt Damon 's character investigates the hotel of the murdered Russian man."The Three Budrys"
"The Three Budrys" is a poem by Adam Mickiewicz which tells a story of three brothers being sent away by their father to far and distant lands in search of priceless treasures. Autumn passes, then winter. The father thinks that his sons have perished at war.
Amidst whirling snow-storms, however, each one manages to return; and all bring back but a single trophy from their odyssey - a Polish bride. [Foreword, The Ballads of Chopin, Salabert Editions. An version of the poem can be found [http://daisy.htmlplanet.com/budrys.html here] ]
Recordings
* [http://pianosociety.com/cms/index.php?section=124 Free Recording] , Piano Society
*Video Recording: [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D_PBTGfhWD8& Part 1] [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QLyumz2jMZY Part 2] ,Youtube .External links
*
*Notes
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.