Andante spianato and Grande Polonaise Brillante, Op. 22

by Frederic Chopin

Romantic Polonaise Advanced
Key E major / E♭ major
Tempo Andante spianato — Grandioso
Composed 1830–1835
Published 1836
Duration 3 min

Instrumentation

Piano

Musical Terms (5)

  • con fuoco Italian
    With fire — in Chopin, indicating passionate, impulsive energy with a specific brilliance of tone.
    In Chopin, con fuoco (as in the C minor Nocturne Op. 48 central section) implies an urgent, almost desperate intensity. The fire is internal as much as dynamic.
  • leggermente Italian
    Lightly — a characteristic instruction in Chopin's ornamental passages indicating a feather-light touch.
    Chopin's ornamental figurations (as in the nocturnes and ballades) should float over the sustained bass harmony. The fingers barely brush the keys; the sound is gossamer.
  • mesto Italian
    Sad, mournful — a characteristic emotional marking in Chopin, indicating a specific quality of melancholy.
    Not merely slow or soft. Chopin's mesto has a particular colour — the sadness of remembrance rather than acute grief. A slightly veiled tone and restrained dynamic are typical.
  • sotto voce Italian
    Under the voice — in a hushed, intimate undertone.
    Softer and more private than piano. A sotto voce passage in Chopin speaks to itself; the audience almost eavesdrops.
  • tempo rubato Italian
    Robbed time — in Chopin's style, the melody flows freely while the accompaniment maintains a steady, regular pulse.
    Described by contemporary accounts of Chopin's own playing: the left hand keeps strict time like a conductor; the right hand sings freely around it, ahead or behind the beat. The two hands are not mechanically synchronised.

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