Who Was Chopin?

art music

Fryderyk Franciszek Chopin (pronounced show-pan) was a Polish composer and piano virtuoso, who lived a short but rather eventful life. He was born in Poland in 1810, and died before his 40th birthday in 1849 after a long battle with tuberculosis. Chopin’s music technically belongs to the Romantic period, yet his work was primarily more indicative of work produced in the Classical and Baroque periods. His favorite composers were Bach, Beethoven, Haydn and Mozart. However, he is most identified as a Romantic composer despite his own objections to be so called.

Chopin was a child prodigy; some called him a second Mozart. By the age of seven, he had already composed two polonaises, and had begun to give concerts. It is significant that a child this young could be so gifted at the piano. He did not start formal lessons until he was six, which suggests incredible talent. After a concert given when he was seven, he was asked by a reporter what he thought the audience liked best about his performance. His answer: “My shirt collar,” endeared him to Polish audiences, because though Chopin was a prodigy, he was still quite charmingly, a child.

Chopin’s family moved to Warsaw so Chopin could study with some of the masters. He received lessons but his skills often were superior to those of his teachers. As a young adult, he traveled to Vienna and was inspired by a performance by Paganini, a German pianist with a great deal of showmanship. While in Vienna, he learned of an uprising in Poland that kept him from returning home.

Since returning to Poland was unsafe, Chopin went from Vienna to Paris, and soon found himself a friend of other great composers and pianists like Franz Liszt and Felix Mendelssohn. In Paris, Chopin also met the somewhat eccentric poet George Sand, who preferred to be called by her pen name rather than her official title as Baroness Dudevant.

Chopin’s introduction to Sand resulted in a romantic relationship of ten years that was frequently stormy and ended when Sand wrote Lucrezia Floriani a semi-autobiographical account of a wealthy actress who cares for a sick and weak prince. Chopin was infuriated at Sand’s profile of him, and ended their relationship. Chopin’s relationship to Sand is chronicled in the 1991 film, Impromptu, featuring Judy Davis and Hugh Grant. Though the film cannot be called totally accurate, it still gives insight into the time period and the relationship of the two artists.

Depressed after ending his relationship with Sand, and quite ill from tuberculosis, Chopin died two years later, with his elder sister at his side. Over one thousand people attended his funeral in Paris, and though he was buried in Paris, he requested that his heart be buried in Poland. This request, so befitting an artist, was carried out, and Chopin’s heart resides in an urn at the Pillar of the Holy Cross Church in Krakow, Poland.

Chopin, unlike his contemporaries, continued to enjoy a great deal of popularity as a composer. All of his works feature the piano, as either a solo instrument or accompaniment. He is credited with reinventing the Polish folk music, the mazurka, and also for his interpretation of the nocturne, a musical style new to his time.

Today Chopin’s most popular works are considered the Fantasie in F Minor, Op. 49, Nocturnes 7 and 8, and Impromptus 2, Op. 36 and 3,Op. 51. Pianists differ as to which is their favorite Chopin piece. Chopin’s work is often showcased in piano recitals, and is considered standard fare for advanced players, though most will probably not eclipse the spirited performances Chopin gave himself.

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Written by Tricia Ellis-Christensen

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