Tsegamla
The Waltz op. 18 n1 and the ballade n4 from Chopin are the two compositions he himself prefered (according to his students). This Waltz simple in appearance is incredingly well crafted in every small detail. It is the mark of a genius.
I'm not surprised. It's amazing. I'm a little surprised that Chopin didn't like Etude Op. 10 No. 5, though (Black Key).
Do you remember the pianist that you heard for the etude op 10 n4 ?
I have an *.mp3 that says it's by Vladimir Horowitz, but I don't know how accurate that it is, since it was downloaded on KaZaA (they often mislabel stuff). I'm not familiar with a lot of composers or concert pianists or antyhing, but isn't Horowitz supposed to be pretty old now? It might not be him. Could be an old recording though. The *.mp3 is titled "Chopin - Etude Op. 10, No. 4 In C Sharp Minor - horowitz.mp3." It's 1.81 MB and I'd be happy to send it to you over AOL Instant Messenger or email it (if that'll work, I've never had much luck with attachments bigger than pictures though). I don't expect everyone to get out of it what I did, but it really just gave me that vibe (at the 0:50 mark, I can't help but think rain).
and what "background story" are you talking about concerning the nocturne N20. are you talking about the film "the pianist" or a real life story involving Chopin ?
The film "The Pianist." I like WWII, took a WWII class, sat in on a Holocaust class, watch the History Channel a lot, etc. Assuming you haven't seen it...
"I played Chopin's Nocturne in C sharp minor. The glassy, tinkling sound of the untuned strings rang through the empty flat and the stairway, floated through the ruins of the villa on the other side of the street and returned as a muted, melancholy echo. When I had finished, the silence seemed even gloomier and more eerie than before. A cat mewed in the street somewhere. I heard a shot down below outside the building - a harsh, loud German noise."
- Wladyslaw Szpilman, The Pianist
"September 1, 1939, and when enemy bombardment forced the closing of Polish State Radio, Szpilman's performance of Chopin's C sharp minor Nocturne was the last live music broadcast."
Basically, the sadness of the piece coupled with image of what it's ushering in was and is really powerful to me.
EDIT: Even before I knew the story behind it, I thought that Nocturne was the saddest one, so I was really amazed at the eerieness of the Szpilman event.