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Topic: Chopin Nocturne Op.27,No.2  (Read 6074 times)

Offline yw1935

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Chopin Nocturne Op.27,No.2
on: June 02, 2009, 03:08:44 AM
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Offline birba

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Re: Chopin Nocturne Op.27,No.2
Reply #1 on: June 02, 2009, 07:09:27 AM
How old are you?!  That was more than beautiful playing, it was so mature and so inspired, I began to doubt if it was really you playing!  Maybe it was one of those piano rolls of Paderewski!
Kidding aside, you have great talent.  Those pearl sounds in that run in the recapitulation, the controlled and steady accompaniment to the rubato in the right hand, and that static closing of the coda.  Wonderful wonderful wonderful.  All the best.

Offline piano_teacher55

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Re: Chopin Nocturne Op.27,No.2
Reply #2 on: June 02, 2009, 07:36:48 AM
Nocturno Op. No. 27. 2 is a musical quite difficult and requires the maturity of his interpretation. But, you very nicely manages, regardless of the year that you have. Your tone is nice and velvety. In this case we can see that you feel and understand music. You are talented and subtle. I think that in this period of your development does not need to play technically demanding compositions. Congratulations.

Offline eduard

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Re: Chopin Nocturne Op.27,No.2
Reply #3 on: June 02, 2009, 08:00:47 AM
Wonderful. Content and the tone nicely. And you have only ten years?
This is truly a talent!
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Piano Street Magazine:
Women and the Chopin Competition: Breaking Barriers in Classical Music

The piano, a sleek monument of polished wood and ivory keys, holds a curious, often paradoxical, position in music history, especially for women. While offering a crucial outlet for female expression in societies where opportunities were often limited, it also became a stage for complex gender dynamics, sometimes subtle, sometimes stark. From drawing-room whispers in the 19th century to the thunderous applause of today’s concert halls, the story of women and the piano is a narrative woven with threads of remarkable progress and stubbornly persistent challenges. Read more
 

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