![]() The darkness of the middle section takes some experimenting hands perhaps as you can't really play this straight through w a metronome rythym, you have to spell out the rubato to make the theme of raindrop and meloncholy more natural sounding.Īlso the "raindrop" beat on the left hand make it a hint of sound throughout the piece don't bring it to the forefront (like most pieces of course) only emphasizing it at certain key turning points in the melody ( this is just me bringing out advice at that time when I didn't know better. I didn't really understand how to derive it at that time. Technically it isn't that difficult and the speed is up to you to determine and I believe the slower you go in certain parts really bring out more feeling in this pieceīut the challenge was the phrasing and legato of the piece. I flipped through the pages of a freshly bought literature book and thought visibly this was easy enough to learn. Raindrop was a piece I learned when I first got back to the piano in 2007. And get the Preludes recording performed by Samson Francois You know, if you will not try, you will never know, but if you will few after some tries, that this is far beyond (I do not mean hard, or demaning, I mean exactly what I wrote - far beyond). There are also very suble rubatos, and other things. You know, I do not want to discourage you, but just wanted to point out some maim problems. Will you handle the crescendo, which will last over few bars and last like 20 seconds? Will you be able to play tiny little quiet drops of Aflat key, while playing big octaves in the same time? Are you able to play two voices simultaneously in one hand? They are quite different, so thus I am talking about it.īut, hey, you know, studying the editions, is for some extreme pure pianinsts, I've never bothered about it, unless there are some really major changes.Īnd yes, the 15th Prelude it's much more difficult than the previous one, both techncally and musically, there are few moments which can be unpleasant for the begginer pianist. The National Edition (this is it's name, for those one who don't know, issued on 150th anniversary of Chopin's birthday) has all white cover with written CHOPIN in the middle and then in the bottom right what is inside - preludes, polonaises and etc. The one you posted, is Paderewski Edition, until 1999 - the only edition on which all polish (and many on the world perhaps) were learning.
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