Polish Music Journal
Chopin! These two syllables breathe a magic spell. Whoever has laid his hands on a piano, nay, whoever has listened to a piano, whether it be in a concert hall or to escape the encompassing fetters on the wings of melody, forever remembers and wishes to revert to the web of enchantment in which that magician held him. To analyze the subtle charm, to translate into words the radiance and fragrance, the storm and stress, the alternating grace and depth, the flights and depressions, the ever-changing but eloquent moods of that music, which vibrates like a human heart laid bare, would seem as impossible as to pull down a star from the moon-lit skies or catch a cloud swiftly wandering across space, vaporous yet shining, or thunder-laden.
Chopin's piano style is more than idiomatic, if it be true that an instrument be something more than the outward projection,
an aggrandizement of a human organ, as the camera is an unconsciously conceived but faithful reproduction of the eye. The piano has
become with Chopin the necessary magnified human organ for an adequate expression of rich inner life, the speaking voice of a poet,
the many-hued palette of a painter; hence his limitation to the instrument of his choice was as necessary and voluntary
as it was unique in the history of musical art.
He never wrote an opera, as was suggested to him; but of dramatic intensity his work is full to the brim. The drama of a noble soul,
imprisoned in a frail and worn body, of a soul that mirrored the aspirations of a race which was living then, as it is now,
the most heartrending of dramas, would necessarily bring forth accents of deep and tragic pathos. Chopin, himself, claimed
that his music embodied the soul of his beloved nation; indeed, like Mickiewicz, Poland's greatest poet, he could say:
"I am a million, because for millions I love and suffer."[4]
One need not indulge in what Mr. Ernest Newman calls "race fallacy" to perceive and discern
in Chopin's utterances, impassioned and moody, almost simultaneously sad and joyous, now dipped in the melancholy
of our landscapes, now sounding the chivalrous pride and nobility of bygone days or the mournful echoes of dire
times—the manifold and compelling chords with which the mysterious harp of the Polish soul is strung.[5]
Pole, pianist, poet, these three words sum up the quintessence of Chopin's personality, as well as any formula ever made.
In these three fundamental aspects he was deeply subjective and revolutionary. Schumann said with the unerring insight
of a kindred spirit: "Chopin's works are cannons buried in flowers" "A tone poet." Heine, his contemporary and friend,
already called him. Of the pianist Mendelssohn said he performed marvels "which no one would ever have believed possible."
But the world, those critics whom Schumann accuses of always lagging behind, ever was and still is apt to misunderstand an
opposed boldness and delicacy alike. The piano is much maligned and belittle and Chopin suffers from that bias.
Although his message reached the world outside of Poland by its force and humanity, few are broad-minded as Dr. Bie,
who candidly confesses: "Why should a German's feeling be better or saner than a Pole?"[7]
The human intellect eager to understand, but too prone to judge in its attempts to weigh the material,
to measure the immeasurable, especially in this scientific age of ours, so conceited about its precisions and estimates, is
apt to go astray in its pretenses to analytical and perfect justice. Prose alas, is ever ready to oppose poetry; hence the queer,
disparaging talk about a genius like Chopin, against which Mr. Fink vehemently but righteously protest. The emotional nature of Chopin's
inspiration, the very abundance and spontaneity of an improvisatory, creative genius, the racial versatility of his high-strung nature,
sufficiently explains his preference for smaller forms, which has been construed into "child-like helplessness" in the larger ones.
The marmorean coldness of the sonata could scarcely appeal to him in this diffused rigidity. If it be true that form is but
extended rhythm[8]
and such rhythm be chiefly an intellectual element in music, the incompatibility of this tyranny with this
nature is here illustrated in the same way as it is by his rubato. But this write holds that some of Chopin's
innovations in this field were most happy, and if some forms did not "master him," he nevertheless perfectly mastered
such forms as suited the needs and contest of his message.[9]
As for the absurd legend of a "sickly," "effeminate" Chopin, it implies both a tribute to the feminine side of his genius—for
creative artists are apt to be double sexed—and a strange blindness as to the fact that the author of the Polonaises and Scherzi,
Ballades and Sonatas, the Fantasie, Etudes, and Barcarolle, was a Titan as well as a magician.
The body struggled to the end against unforgiving illness, but inside a flame burned unflinchingly. The muse of the sick man in
turns voiced the tenderness and glory of life, forebodings of death, even serene visions of the Beyond.
On his very death-bed Chopin dictated music. I know of no higher achievement of manliness. Another achievement of
man and artist alike was that Chopin worked and struggled hard—a solitary soul among the worldly crowd in which he
moved—to overcome his improvisatory impulse, as if it were a deficiency, ever correcting and perfecting his
conceptions with pitiless self-criticism and undaunted courage, before he could satisfy the aristocrat in soul
and utterance he really was. The revelations of George Sand make of this a pathetic story. Mr. Huneker calls Chopin an
"unconscious classic." If the very essence of art be choice, if only those who most deliberately sift and choose are
apt to become classics, then the "greater Chopin" surely was a classical though what we know of his efforts toward
perfection would not make him an unconscious one. Unconscious, he only was in the divine part of inspiration that was his.
But some would have us believe that there are higher and nobler ideals than his! Morals are indeed the "Circe of philosophers,"
as Nietsche says, and musical critics do not escape the temptation in their efforts for a class-room hierarchy of genius.
As if art could have a nobler purpose than sincerity of heart allied to beauty of expression! This alliance is enough
indeed to satisfy the legitimate human pride in artistic effort, to raise art above any other form of human play.
Two conceptions, contrasted in character and treatment, have supplied the material and form of this Impromptu,
which—like a minuet—consists of three parts, the third being a repetition of the first, the main subject thus enclosing
the middle-section. These parts are in turn divided into sections, the first in three (A,B,C); the second or middle part into two
(D,E).[11]
It is to be noted that while C carries a reminder—not as would be usual a repetition—of A, out of which is evolved an
extension and climax, the two segments of the middle section (D, E) are quite distinct and lead straight on to the return
of the beginning. This breaks the regularity of a conventional pattern in a happy way, distinctive of Chopin's resourcefulness
in avoiding rigidity and monotony.
Prof. Niecks, sometimes badly deficient in his characterizations of the more recondite aspects of Chopin's masterpieces, but
obviously enamored with this gentle piece, aptly compares the first part, with its ever moving triplets, to the bubbling and sparkling
of a fountain "on which the sunbeams that steal through the interstices of the overhanging foliage are playing." The melodic
lines are skillfully wrapped up—"enclosed in charming figurations," as Schumann says. Their waves freely and swiftly rise
and fall, the performer's expression has to follow the fancifully described curves with velvety fingers in naturally graded upward
crescendos and downward diminuendos. The greater the length of the ascending wave, the greater must be the crescendo which once
even rises to a powerful climax (11)[12] when the melodic top-notes can be markedly brought
out in their shifting, syncopated rhythm (see Figure 2 below, or
In the middle section a voice seems to rise from the depths of the playing waters. The change of the everflowing triplets
into a broad rhythm and the shifting of tonality to the relative minor key adds to the contrasting value of a cantilena,
which now as distinctly dominates the whole fabric as previously the melody had been concealed in figuration. It breathes nobility,
tenderness, yearning; in its second section even rises to passion. The noble melody is apt to please German critics.
It has what they so highly prize and call "Langathmigkeit," a long breath. Compared to the pregnantly short Beethovenian themes,
or to the mostly fragmentary melodies of Schumann, Chopin's melody has indeed the longest swing and scope. Before Wagner,
Chopin is the inventor of the "unendliche Melodie"—unending melody—but the melody under consideration differs
from the Wagnerian mode in as much as it is an articulate phrase, consisting of two distinct sections, themselves sub-divided
according to the regular patterns of phrase building.
A Master Lesson on Chopin's First Impromptu
by Zygmunt Stojowski [1]
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Chopin and the Music of Poland
Chopin's Quality
Chopin Colorist, Poet and Innovator
Poland's Drama in Chopin's Music
The Real Chopin and the World's Judgments
Chopin the Titan![]()
Mr. Stojowski's Analytical Lesson on the Impromptu in A flat
Formal Structure
The First Part: Character and Interpretation
a
larger image). 
Figure 2: Mm. 19-30 from Chopin's Impromptu in A-flat Major.
a
larger image). 
Figure 3: Mm. 10-18 from Chopin's Impromptu in A-flat Major.
The Middle Section
a
larger image). 
Figure 4: Mm. 36-61 from Chopin's Impromptu in A-flat Major.
Figure 5: Stojowski's interpretation of m. 45.
Figure 6: Stojowski's interpretation of m. 48.
Figure 7: Mm. 70-86 from Chopin's Impromptu in A-flat Major.
a
larger image).
The repetition of the first part (F) [from m. 83] brings no new element, except a short extension in the coda (G) [from m. 113]
through the interpolation of some chords (25) [in m. 115] between the repetitions of the closing section. These, by a sort of
gradual elimination, waveringly, falteringly interspersed with silences, bring to an end the play of the bubbling fountain,
as if large drops were falling slower and slower from the receding waters, until the whole vision vanished and fades
away into dreamland, whence it came. The "sotto-voce" indicated by the composer (25) is thus explained-partly explained
away—as one of those general directions applying to the spirit but not to the letter—the particular point where used.
It is to be gradually reached through the shadings suggested. A syncopated pedal—the foot coming down after the chord
having been struck—and a complete removal of the pedal during the rests, will greatly enhance the
mysterious, waning effect desired.
Figure 3 below, or
a
larger image). 
Figure 8: Mm. 111-127 from Chopin's Impromptu in A-flat Major.
[1].
This and all subsequent notes by Maja Trochimczyk. Original publication data: A Master Lesson on Chopin's First
Impromptu, By the Distinguished Polish Piano Virtuoso, Teacher and Composer
Sigismund Stojowski (Philadelphia: Theodore Presser Co., 1915). This performance study of
Chopin's Impromptu in A-flat Major, Op. 29, was published in the series, Master Lessons
on the Works of the Great Composers for the Pianoforte (Philadelphia: Theodore Presser Co.), including up to that point
five other Stojowski editions (Rubinstein's Barcarolle, Op. 30, No. 1; Schubert's Moment Musical, Op. 94 No. 3;
Schumann's Nachtstuck, Op. 23 No. 4; Schubert-Liszt's
Hark! Hark! The Lark); and one piece each by Mendelssohn (Rondo Capriccioso) and Mozart (Fantasia in D Minor).
[Back]
[2].
Stojowski refers here to Stanisław Przybyszewski's (1868-1927) first study of Chopin, in
Zur Psychologie des Individuums (Berlin, Fontane & co., 1892-1906). Przybyszewski's philosophy
of creativity was expressed in idiosyncratic studies of Chopin, Nietzsche, and Ola Hansson. [Back]
[3].
Henry
T. Finck (1854-1926), Chopin and other Musical Essays (New York, Scribner's, 1889). Reprinted in 1892, 1894, 1904, 1910.
[Back]
[4].
Quotation from "The Great Improvisation" spoken by Konrad, the main protagonist in a romantic drama,
Dziady [The Forefather's Eve], written by Adam Mickiewcz (1798-1855) in 1832, after the fall of the November Uprising of 1831. [Back]
[5].
Ernest Newman (1868-1959, real name: Robert Williams), was the most famous English music critic in the first half of the 20th century.
His books included studies of Gluck, Wagner, Elgar, Hugo Wolf, Richard Strauss, Beethoven, Mozart, Thomas,
Verdi, Puccini, and Liszt. He was particularly interested in the opera. The source of the reference to "racial fallacy" is not known.
[Back]
[6].
Ignacy Jan Paderewski, "Chopin, mowa" in Obchód setnej rocznicy urodzin Chopina i pierwszy Zjazd Muzyków Polskich we Lwowie
(Lwów, 1912), 195-202. Published in English as Chopin: A Discourse trans. Laurence
Alma-Tadema (London: Addlington, 1911). Reprinted in Polish Music Journal 4 no. 2 (winter 2001). [Back]
[7].
Dr. Bie, probably Oskar Bie (1864-1938), the author of A History of the Pianoforte and Pianoforte Players, trans.
Ernest E. Kellett, and Edward W. Naylor (London, 1899), reprinted New York: Da Capo Press, 1966). Bie
was a prolific writer on music, the author of: Intime Musik ([Berlin] Bard Marquardt et co., 1904); Reise um die Kunst
(Berlin, E. Reiss, 1910); Tanzmusik (Berlin: Bard, Marquardt, 1905). [Back]
[8].
Stojowski's note: "Jules Combarieu: La Musique, ses lois et son evolution." Jules
Combarieu, (1859-1916), La musique, ses lois, son évolution (Paris: E. Flammarion, 1907). English trans.
as Music, its Laws and Evolution (London, K. Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co. Ltd., 1910). [Back]
[9].
Stojowski's note: "I am glad to pay a tribute on this occasion to the illuminating book of Mr. E. Stillman Kelley,
which deals with that side of Chopin's genius and to American critics such as Mr. Huneker and Mr. Finck,
who have showed an insight and understanding of Chopin's art which it is perhaps permissible for a Polish artist
gratefully to commend." Edgar Stillman Kelley (1857-1944), Chopin the Composer;
His Structural Art and its Influence on Contemporaneous Music (New York, London: G. Schirmer, 1913). [Back]
[10].
Stojowski's note: "A Polish letter of Chopin, comparatively recently published an to which I do not remember any reference made
in any foreign book or essay, bears out the assertion about Chopin's occasional descriptive tendencies,
as it relates, almost down to details, the genesis and context of the F-sharp major Impromptu."
[Back]
[11].
Stojowski refers here to letters inserted in his edition of the score. A—m. 1; B—the middle of m. 8; C—m. 19; D—m. 35;
E—m. last eightnote in m. 50. Additional letters appear in m. 83 (F) and m. 113 (G). [Back]
[12].
The numbers in brackets have been inserted into Stojowski's edition to indicate points of interest that he mentions
in the text. However, number 11 appearing here is wrong: the climax in the first part of the work occurs on
Stojowski's No. 9 (in m. 23). Stojowski's numbers appear in the following measures: (1) in m. 2; (2) in m. 6; (3) in m. 8 just after the letter B;
(4) on the last quarternote (B-flat) in m. 11; (5) in m. 14; (6) on second quarternote in m. 15; (7) on second quarternote in m. 16;
(8) on second quarternote in m. 17; (9) in m. 23; (10) in m. 27; (11) in m. 30, on the pianissimo eightnote before the fermata; (12) in m. 34, on the last note of the
descending passage; (13) on the first note in m. 45; (14) on the second half-note in m. 48; (15) in m. 49; (16) in m. 58; (17) in m. 61;
(18) in the middle of m. 62; (19) in m. 71; (20) in m. 74; (21) on the trill in m. 78; (22) in m. 80; (23) in m. 81; (24) in m. 82. [Back]
[13].
Stojowski's note: "G.C. Ashton Johnson: A Handbook to Chopin's Works. A most valuable book of reference."
George Charles Ashton Jonson (1861-?), A Handbook to Chopin's Works (New York, Doubleday, 1905). [Back]
[14].
Stojowski's views on the use of the pedal are similar to those of Paderewski. See Paderewski's texts on rubato
and Chopin in The Polish Music Journal 4 no. 1 and 2 (2001). [Back]
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Copyright 2002 by the Polish Music Journal.
Editor: Maja Trochimczyk. Assistant Editor: Linda Schubert.
Publisher: Polish Music Center, Winter 2002.
Design: Maja Trochimczyk & Marcin Depinski.
Comments and inquiries by e-mail: polmusic@email.usc.edu