By Alan Walker

Published: Friday, 11 February 2022 at 12:00 am


Musicology devours its own children. Time was when Frédéric Chopin was generally regarded as a ‘salon composer’ of charming miniatures – mazurkas, waltzes, nocturnes – unworthy of a place in the pantheon. It never occurred to our forefathers that a small Prelude, for instance, could contain a good deal more musical substance than an entire Boccherini string quartet. One had, so the thinking went, to compose symphonies, operas and oratorios in order to be ‘great’. Today, all that has changed.

 

Within a 50-mile radius of where I am writing this article, someone somewhere is either playing or listening to Chopin’s music. Nor does it depend on the location of my desk – which happens to be situated near Toronto. Move it to New York, Vienna, London, or even Beijing, and my proposition remains the same. Whatever the time zone, the sun never sets on Chopin’s music. Millions of listeners are held in thrall to it. Radio stations across the world broadcast his compositions. The sale of Chopin CDs holds firm. The ‘Chopin recital’ remains as popular as ever, a permanent fixture in the concert hall. Chopin competitions continue to spring up across the globe. Finally, and most remarkably, Chopin has come to symbolise a nation. He is Poland’s best-known son. Is there any other composer of whom similar things could reasonably be said?

Hearing Chopin’s music is a little like coming home. Artur Rubinstein expressed this well when he wrote, ‘When the first notes of Chopin sound through the concert hall there is a happy sign of recognition. All over the world men and women know his music. They love it. They are moved by it. When I play Chopin I know I speak directly to the hearts of people.’

Of all the great composer-pianists Chopin probably enjoyed the briefest career, appearing before the public no more than a dozen times in his life. He disliked performing to a large audience and much preferred to play to an intimate circle of friends. Contemporary accounts of his playing refer to his infinite variety of shading, his singing tone, and his quiet demeanour at the keyboard. He was the antithesis of the ‘thunder and lightning school’ of piano playing, which came to dominate the late 19th century and distort Chopin’s own music, and his favourite piano was the silvery-toned Pleyel, with its easy action. How extraordinary to think that Chopin’s passionate music was composed on this relatively simple instrument with a keyboard compass of a mere six octaves.

How did Chopin use nationalism?

Chopin’s life outside his homeland may have altered his lifestyle but, as Jeremy Siepmann explains, his music remained Polish at heart

Chopin’s life was neatly divided between the homelands of his Polish mother and his French-born father. He spent the first 21 years of his life in Warsaw, the remaining 18 in Paris. He was both the greatest of Polish composers and effectively the father of French pianism. Despite his Polish birth and upbringing, both countries have always counted Chopin as their own. And Chopin himself? Insofar as nationality goes (though his music infinitely transcends it), he was forever Polish. His Mazurkas, Polonaises and Polish songs outnumber his works in any other genre; Polish dances such as the krakowiak crop up, undercover, in works with no outer national references (the finale of the E minor Concerto, for instance); mazurkas in disguise infiltrate altogether different dances (most spectacularly in the trio section of the F sharp minor Polonaise) and even find their way into the Nocturnes. Nor are the Polish elements in Chopin’s music confined to formal models. There are numerous examples of harmonies, rhythms, melodic types, chromaticisms, syncopations and so on which are characteristically Polish, and mostly derived from folk music, both authentic and popularised. Sometimes the references are specific and potent. The middle section of the B minor Scherzo, for instance, is based on a popular carol, carrying a very special and poignant resonance for native listeners.