Chopin Waltz Minor Posthumous Pdf Viewer

2020. 2. 19. 14:53카테고리 없음

Posts in the piano forum about this piece by: January 17, 2005, 08:48:43 PM by berrt Hi. Im an adult beginner, started last April, leaving Elise, Burgmuller etc behind.

  1. Chopin Etude In C Sharp Minor Posthumous
  2. Chopin : Polonaise In G Minor - Posthumous

Chopin Etude In C Sharp Minor Posthumous

As a first Chopin piece i thought of Op 34, 2 - looking at the score, it seems not too difficult. Is that right, or are there any 'traps' i did not find? Berrt February 05, 2005, 10:30:00 PM by berrt Against some advice from this forum im working on this one as a first chopin piece (for my teacher its ok, she said it will be a little bit hard for me.) Bar 29 requires the LH to hold c# and then play g a e - its possible, but really feels clumsy. Is there an 'elegant' way to play that or have i just to stretch my hand?

Bar 31 the same feeling with e plus ac#g. Bye Berrt July 27, 2005, 04:00:32 PM by stormx Hi!!

I have been playing for 8 months, taking 1 class a week. I have just finished: Scarlatti - K32 Bach - Prelude in C (WTC I) Clementi - Sonatina Op.36 n°1 (all 3 movements) I have also learned 'Fur Elise' (still polishing it, sounds awful for the moment ) I want to get into some Chopin, and i found out that pretty unknown Posth. Waltz in 'A minor' (beautiful piece). I do not want to tackle something really out of my reach, tough.

I see this Waltz is graded as 4/5, and as you can see i have not played anything on this grade yet. I am a little intimidated because in another thread, Bernhard said that he would not assign any Chopin to someone with less than 2 years of piano. To sum it up, do you beleive it is a good idea to begin working on this Waltz? Thanks in advance for your advices, January 24, 2006, 04:31:35 PM by diedel Hi and sorry by my poor english, I'm learning the Chopin's Waltz Op.34 N.2 in A minor and it's hard for me to control the volume and clearity of my left hand (the tipical rythm of the waltz). I have to work hard to maintain the low volume.

Sharp

I'm talking about the bars from 17 to 36. I have the same problem with another waltz of Chopin and I ask if there are a special fingering for these chords or anything to observe to play naturally this type of rythm. I've read the Chang book about how to play relaxed the chords, I think I follow more or less the method. I notice some progress if I play only with my left hand but is very slow. The hard thing is to control the volume.

Also, I play a little bit the pedal because without it, the piece sounds a little bit 'staccato', I dont understand why is not marked the pedal in this sheet, although it seems to be used in the cd auditions. (I'm ignorant, be easy with me ) Thanks for reading.

October 14, 2006, 02:54:31 PM by swim4ever22 I'm trying to learn this waltz, but I have some questions. When I listen to the waltz in a recording, it's very legato, and very smooth, but in the music, there are no pedal markings, especially on the first page. How can I make it sound legato when there are no pedal markings?

To any of you that have learned/played this piece, what did you do as far as pedalling? December 11, 2006, 08:23:16 PM by diedel Hi there, I'm trying to play this waltz since I dont remember when. Surprising, the more difficult passage for me is from bars 17 to 22 aproximately. I can't get the sound I want. I have played the left hand bass with the 5 finger for the more low note of the chord, later I've changed to the 4 finger and recently I've returned to the 5 finger.

I find my hand more relaxed. What fingering recommend for this bars, 17 to 22? I have a little hand.

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Composed during Chopin's last years in the 19th century, it was almost a hundred years before this waltz was published in 1955. As such, it doesn't have an opus number. It is the 19th waltz composed by Chopin. The beginning A minor theme is the main subject of the waltz, appearing multiple times in the piece. It is then counteracted by a more joyful A major theme about halfway into the piece. It doesn't last long, and in the end the waltz is concluded like it began with a brief coda.

Chopin : Polonaise In G Minor - Posthumous

Performance by Aya Higuchi. Sheet music: ).