'Comme le vent', which is longer, faster, less predictable, and spreads the rapid fingerwork across both hands, sometimes simultaneously... 'Comme le vent' is 21 pages of more rapid and more unpredictable passagework without break (excepting the last half page or so), and a good deal of it also requires the light touch of the Chopin ('like the wind', as the title says). I'd still point to it as more difficult than playing the Chopin in under a minute even if it doesn't have the same emphasis on the weaker fingers.
regardless of what you claim, i thought you would be smart enough to at least consult the score (let alone actually trying it out on a piano) during the course of this 'discussion' of ours.
CLV is without break? it's 20 pages (my edition) with NEITHER HAND sustaining more than 3 and a half pages of continous passagework in ANY part of the piece.
the passagework in CLV is unpredictable and requires more dexterity? again, please get the score and READ it. half of the 'passagework' in CLV consist of ARPEGGIATED CHORDS repeating themselves over and over. (coincidentally this is most prominent in the only stretch of sustained 'passagework' that's over 3 pages) another quarter consists of repetitive scale figures within a single hand position, and the other quarter is mordents, which can even be simplified into scale figures within a single hand position if you count from a down-beat. for a piece that boasts 20 pages of single note passagework, nowhere does it even require a none-sequential (ie 1324) fingering. Nowhere does it even require any thumbpassing except a lone 3 bar RH scale and the two lines at the bottom of page 19, which are unpredictably, C MAJOR scales.
now you want to find me a piece (apart from that one short passage in the OC, written a century later) that requires 2.5 pages of sustained chromatics with the outter fingers while BOTH the THUMB AND INDEX FINGERS play chordal accompaniment? yeah, that's rather odd, MUST BE PREDICTABLE!
i will spare you an analysis of the SPEED LIMITS concerning the techniques involved in each respective piece.
oh yeah, and a LIGHTER TOUCH makes it harder to play faster? ok
now how about i remind you of your comparative argument:
(for 10/2) this means the right hand would be operating at 800 notes per minute... (for CLV) "Gibbons comes close (at speed, it lasts four minutes and seven seconds; Gibbons takes four and a half minutes) and certainly tops 800 notes per minute."
why else would you say that if you didnt intend a direct comparison on a NOTE PER SECOND basis? good job on backing out of this in your last reply.
i'm hardly a jerk, but you're still WRONG.