Newcomer here . Just wanted to get an opinion on changing such a highly revered piece. I love the melody of this piece but no matter how much I listen to it, the middle section doesn't appeal to me at all. It just to be so contrary to the peaceful mood the beginning has.
Newcomer here . Just wanted to get an opinion on changing such a highly revered piece.
it would not be the first time this (or several actually) of the etudes have been modified or adapted (heck even ones by other respected composers too). it all depends on your reasons for doing so. generally i encourage your artistic sensibilities if you do it for musical reasons. that is we make technical decisions for expressive purposes, we don't make expressive /musical changes for purely technical ones (well some do, i was just never taught to ever do that).
In this case, I'd say the opposite. There can be no acceptable musical reason for omitting this integral section. Sorry to be blunt, but anyone who cannot appreciate the middle section has not appreciated the composition as a whole. Leave out the middle section by all means and enjoy the beautiful melody. However, if that is done because a person cannot appreciate what the middle section means in the context of the music, neither have they fully understood the melodic section as music. The piece is about contrast- not merely about beauty. The only acceptable reason I can see is a technical decision. To claim that it's musically justified to cut the hard bit would be a mere excuse that is completely unjustifiable with regard to the musical nature of the composition. You might as well claim that only learning the first bit of fur elise is done for "musical" reasons-as if some profoundly artistic decision went into doing so. It's just a non-starter, sorry. He can enjoy a beautiful melody by all means, but there's no justification to making up a bogus "musical" rationale for cutting an integral section.PS. Just to clarify- without the ABA structure there is no beauty to the return to simplicity. Either you have monotony, by adding an extra repeat with nothing between or a melody and then nothing else. It's about the calm after the storm. If that's not going to happen, you're not playing the same piece of music. It's okay to enjoy playing a melody from a composition that you cannot manage the whole of, but it's not okay to pretend that leaving out the emotional structure is done for positive "musical" reasons.
it looks like he's just trying to learn the etude and leaving part of it out? that doesn't make sense to me.
Yet people do the same thing with Sonatas all the time. Learn just a movement, rather than the whole.You can't actually break a Chopin etude. If you only want to play a bit of it, or a simplified version of it or whatever then that's fine. It will survive, undameged, for the rest of us. Just so long as you don't represent either (to yourself or others) that you actually play the thing. Yes, it may be a better piece musically as a whole, certainly it is a better "etude" as a whole, and no doubt Chopin wanted it played as a whole. But so what? If just a bit of it is what you like, then you can just play that bit; what you do in the privacy of your own piano room is nobody else's business.I for one have done far worse things to pieces, and doubt I'm alone in that.