Home
Piano Music
Piano Music Library
Top composers »
Bach
Beethoven
Brahms
Chopin
Debussy
Grieg
Haydn
Mendelssohn
Mozart
Liszt
Prokofiev
Rachmaninoff
Ravel
Schubert
Schumann
Scriabin
All composers »
All composers
All pieces
Search pieces
Recommended Pieces
Audiovisual Study Tool
Instructive Editions
Recordings
PS Editions
Recent additions
Free piano sheet music
News & Articles
PS Magazine
News flash
New albums
Livestreams
Article index
Piano Forum
Resources
Music dictionary
E-books
Manuscripts
Links
Mobile
About
About PS
Help & FAQ
Contact
Forum rules
Pricing
Log in
Sign up
Piano Forum
Home
Help
Search
Piano Forum
»
Piano Board
»
Audition Room
»
Etude Op.10 No.9 -- Chopin
Print
Pages: [
1
]
Go Down
Topic: Etude Op.10 No.9 -- Chopin
(Read 4583 times)
escort
PS Silver Member
Jr. Member
Posts: 32
Etude Op.10 No.9 -- Chopin
on: December 02, 2007, 01:53:14 AM
Aright, I posted this earlier this year a couple weeks after I started it. Anyway, here is an updated recording, as it's one of the pieces I have to play for my juries here this coming week. I guess it still has a lot of room for improvement... but it is a good bit better than where it was at the time of the last recording.
Comments/criticisms are very welcome.
Logged
Chopin: Etude Op. 10 No. 9 in F Minor
Sign up for a Piano Street membership to download this piano score.
Sign up for FREE! >>
pianistimo
PS Silver Member
Sr. Member
Posts: 12142
Re: Etude Op.10 No.9 -- Chopin
Reply #1 on: December 02, 2007, 06:50:12 PM
Wow. You're playing some good stuff. I think this can be taken more 'at ease' in some places and more 'frenzied' in others. I like to hear the beginning more 'at ease' and work into the 'frenzy.' This is, of course, just a personal opinion - and Chopin is always very subjective (within the boundaries of Chopin's own markings).
I'd like to hear the beginning with slightly softer 'loudest' dynamics as it seems to be the basis for a kind of 'accompaniment.' A sort of 'nocturne' effect - that lulls the listener for a bit - and then surprises them with a sort of cynical turn of simultaneous attraction and distraction from what is happening.
To me, this piece is much like the moonlight sonata. Equal portions of this mysterious magnetic attraction (pull) and also de-magnetic (pulling away) - so one feels at the end almost where they were at the beginning excepting having gone through a very mysterious experience. Maybe de-magnetized.
Logged
escort
PS Silver Member
Jr. Member
Posts: 32
Re: Etude Op.10 No.9 -- Chopin
Reply #2 on: December 05, 2007, 03:53:17 AM
Agreed, I think 90% of the things I've worked on with this piece are the dynamics and phrasing in the first section, and then where it returns later on in the piece, and I'm always a bit uneasy with it (even though it is the easiest part of the piece, based on technique).
I like how you use 'frenzied' and 'at ease' as descriptions. Most of the critiques I have received on this piece were that it needed more 'dynamic contrast' (which isn't wrong, it still does, it just needs to be applied correctly), yet really, just exaggerating the markings on the page doesn't really cover the whole problem, and in some sections (like you mention in the beginning) could possibly make the problem worse by taking away the unique feel that each section has. I think those descriptive words do a better job at illustrating where you could use such contrast. I also like your comparison of this piece to the moonlight sonata; I think that's a good comparison.
Logged
Sign-up to post reply
Print
Pages: [
1
]
Go Up