I'm sure this thread has been done a million times, but I'm going to ask anyway. Considering I have played a lot of Chopin in the past but never an etude, where should I start?Something else to consider: I have pretty small hands (I can reach a ninth, but I sometimes trouble with large chords because my fingers don't spread very far apart from each other)
@J_menz- I have to disagree; not that he didn't know what he was doing, but that they should study the Etudes in order. There are many etudes that can benefit your technique, but starting with 10/1 and working your way up isn't nessecary if you just want to study one particular technique.
j_menz - I disagree with you. Op 10 no 1 is one of hard etudes to play. It is easy to read but I would never recommend it for somebody to start with. There are more accessible etudes where there is higher chance that he can actually handle them.
to j_menz:Chopin's etudes are not for beginners and neither for intermediate players. They are not meant to build technique (in the meaning of: from scratch) - they actually already require a serious amount of technique on which they are meant to build up.Chopin only let his most advanced and best students play them.
From my experience, piano teachers do not let their students start Chopin etudes with op 10 no 1. They pick the more accessible ones, ones that build up on some skills and abilities that students already acquired. Does this mean they all disagree with Chopin and question his teaching?
Have you ever played any Chopin etude yourself? If yes, have you started with op 10 no 1?
I am curious though, to see why he wrote them in the order he did, or if there is more value to doing it that way- perhaps it could make this thread different than the dozen other threads of the Chopin etudes!
I am curious of progression of keys of Op 10. It goes from C Major, A Minor, and sort of develop a major / minor combination with circle of fifth. I am trying to find some common themes or variations or anything like that. Any thought, anyone?
Hmm.... it's actually a little more logical than I'd thought.1 - C major2 - A minor (relative minor of 1) 3 - E major4 - C# minor (relative minor of 3)5 - Gb major6 - Eb minor (relative minor of 5)7 - C major8 - F major9 - F minor (relative minor of 10)10 - Ab major11 - Eb major12 - C minor (relative minor of 11)Still, it's hardly the sort of order one usually sees where such is intended.Interestingly, if you count the number of accidentals you get 0044 6601 4433, which is George Sand's phone number.
i know it's all up for speculation, the equally unsexy possibility exists that the order as presented in published was ultimate decided by-for $$$-- publisher/editor at the time. Wait don't tell me the score's we get are affected by the economics of the deal, surely, not, that never happened. *wonders if Durand and company are laughing in the afterlife at how much they have trolled everyone
Durand only published the first French edition. Pretty much simultaneous editions were published separately in England and Germany. If these three nations had been so easily and coincidentally able to agree, history would have been a much tamer affair.
I think you should either start with Tris Novellus Etudes 1,2, or Op.10 No.6If you're good at polyrythyms:-Tris Novellus Etudes 1,2 If you're good at six-flat playing: -Op.10 No.6