There are also several stories that the work was created through major or minor plagiarism. I have heard two pieces being mentioned as the source but I don't remember which one. I think one of them was a Moscheles piece. He was a composer quite famous in his days and an important influence on Chopin.
I've heard rumors that Chopin believed it to be too close to the style of Beethoven's 'Moonlight' Sonata. In fact, there's a thread here somewhere about the Fantasie-Impromptu having the exact same notes in a part of the C#-minor section as the cadenza near the end of Moonlight's 3rd movement. Not sure where that thread is though...Phil
I must admit to not being too fond of the piece, which colours my judgement of it, but even leaving that aside, the C-sharp minor sections don't really have the improvisatory quality that pervades the other three impromptus (the D-flat major section is another story) - an improvisatory quality implied by the title "impromptu" - so perhaps this was something which weighed on Chopin's mind after he had written the piece and made him shelve it rather than sending it to the publishers. (Though the film Impromptu with Hugh Grant as Chopin and Judy Davis as George Sand is fictionalised, it does show him remarking after playing through part of the Fantasie-Impromptu that he doesn't feel it has the improvisatory feel of a good impromptu - presumably the most famous examples at the time were those of Schubert.)
Hi !! Can anybody be more precise about Beethoven's Moonlight sonata and Chopin's FI similitudes? What bars of the FI are very similar to what bars of what movement from the sonata?I must confess that i have listen to both works lot of times, but i have never realized they were similar Thanks,
Just because a measure is the same doesn't mean he plagarized (not saying he couldn't have, but I don't know for sure).
Is it possible that his late acceptance of Beethoven's music could have influenced his decision not to publish it?