I wish I could forget this piece and have the chance of listen to it for the first time, in this day I would fall in love for the Piano one more time...
Thank you for sharing this deep, profound lesson which was so complete and touching. I am 54 right now, and I wonder what I would have done with piano if I had the possibility of hearing such masterclasses on UA-cam when I was 14. It's like going to conservatory without having attended it. It's so lucky for all of us and for humanity itself that you and many other great artists, men and musicians, are willing to share your knowledge and emotions with us. We all grow together. Thanks a lot!
Thank you so much for this great Master class. Thankyou for sharing with all of us this deep impressions. Im surge it Will get my interpretation one level above thaks tô your generosity. I hope tô see your performance here in Brazil in Rio some Day. I wish you The Best.
to me, you are the greatest music teacher Mr.Niemczuk. Thank you so so much for the music, teaching, storytelling, and motivation!! One of the greatest emotional achievements of piano music and technique.
Thank you so much!!!! You have no idea how much it means to me and how special and satisfied you make me feel. Music, performing and teaching is all the love of my life!
It seems fate has brought me to this piece. I wanted to learn Op15 No. 3, but I accidentally downloaded the score for Op 48 No.1 and started playing it. Hey, I thought, this is not the piece I am looking for, but it sounds amazing and I have definitely heard it before. A very iconic piece. I felt compelled to keep learning and within a couple of days learned to play the introduction (the first 2 pages in my edition). It's definitely one of the most satisfying pieces of music I have ever had the pleasure to play. As Greg said "it comes straight from the composers soul". Probably I lack the pianistic skill to learn the whole piece, but the introduction is quite enough for me. I am in heaven.
I love the way you describe Chopin’s music, I feel that you share his artistry in such wonderful words. I have recently begun teaching myself this piece, and the sheer weight of it makes it an especially emotional one for me.
when I listen to this piece, I imagine someone whose heart has been broken, standing behind the railing of a bridge, ready to jump. Suddenly, he starts to recall good memories, and then wonder if life could be worth living after all. but he realizes that in every moment of joy he recalls hides the overwhelming presence of the loved one, wich now gives all those happy memories a bitter taste, constantly reminding what was lost. This realization turns his dispair into anger, frustration and finally determination. And enventually, the helpless lover end up jumping...
This was the piece that opened my previously closed heart to Chopin and was a portal for me into the world of classical music in general. It was like being plunged into the richest and most magnificent realm of intense and powerfully wide ranging emotion, deeper that anything I'd preciously experience listening to music, almost transcendent in fact, and I was determined to learn the piano in the hope of one day playing this nocturnten years on I now have a growing list of pieces I aspire to play but your superb, and beautifully articulated tutorial helped me understand why my soul felt/feels so connected to this particular piece and the doors it opened within me - to play it is still my ultimate goal , maybe one day I'll get there. Your concert performance was really wonderful ❤ I've only just discovered your channel , what a rich source of expertise and knowledge you are sharing, thank you so much.
Thank you! Welcome to my music world! Indeed, for a Chopin lover you can find such analyses of almost every single Chopin's piece of music! It was a long journey during the dark times of COVID-19..... Enjoy!
Yes Greg. Absolutely right that it blows you from the first hearing. In the 50s I bought, a second hand 78 of. Rubinstein playing this nocturne and I’ve been hooked ever since. Unbelievably incredible composition which never fades with repeated listening.
Bravo Monsieur! Excellent! I love the drama and your interpretation inspires me to learn this piece. Your story about your lesson reminded me of the last lesson that I had where I left in tears never to return and I wish I had known what your friend had told you that you met on the street, I might have taken things a little differently. Needless to say, I have not had a lesson for two years because of that, it was very intimidating, everything that could be criticized was criticized, my tone, dynamics, articulation, time, my shoes…he criticize my shoes! I mean really! I left feeling like a bull in a china shop! The more lessons I had with him (I worked with him for about nine months) the worse I got, the more distracted I got and felt more and more worthless. We had one ongoing battle where he would never help me with any kind of technical difficulties he only wanted to do interpretations and I felt I couldn’t do the interpretations unless I could play the damn notes! The interpretations were just the icing on the cake, I wasn’t worried about that. And if all that was really complementary then I must be one hell of a pianist! Anyway I’m glad I’m not alone. 😂
I have been sitting here for 48 minutes and 22 seconds hanging on your words, that does not happen often, a stellar performance. It was fascinating and inspiring. Really a great lecture, one of those that you will remember forever, you are so passionate, it is contagious. Thanks a lot, but now I have to go practicing.
Really interesting analysis. Playing the matching phrases of the first and third sections is an excellent idea, to show the parallels. You also play alternative ways the music could have been written (e.g. 7:52 and 18:14) which really helps me understand the music better. I don't think I've seen other people do this. I like the Wodzinska interpretation (though I'm not well read on Chopin's life) because this piece seems, to me, to express an unutterable loneliness. I imagine Chopin alone some night, sitting at a cafe overlooking the Seine, thinking of her marriage to someone else. For what it's worth, this is how I see it (timings are from this video): 42:20 - 42:38: I'm so lonely. 42:38 - 42:59: I'll be this lonely until I die. 42:59 - 43:40: Some fond memories of her. 43:40 - 44:15: Memories bring quiet tears. Second section starts with acceptance - it's for the best - she's happy - I'm managing. But the sorrow and grief well up with the interrupting octaves, and no matter how hard he tries to hold on to the thin serenity, it breaks down into an emotional crisis (46:01) and uncontrolled weeping (third section). In the coda (47:46), the notes going up are his hopes, escaping into the air, leaving him only with sorrow (47:56) Needless to say, this does not speak well of George Sand.
I wouldn't have quit the piano if I had the chance to watch your video when I was 12. And now being 46 year old I'm in love with chopin's music again. Thank u so much.
As an early intermediate player, these videos are so fascinating to me and I always learn so much from them. Thank you so much sir for continuing to make these amazing videos.
Thank you so much for these lectures! I am 16 years old and Chopin is one the most important things in my life. This is my favorite nocturne and I desperately want to play it well, the way Chopin intended and your video helps so much! 💜
Great lecture. I was especially moved because I came across this piece shortly after my own breakup and it really spoke to me during that time. It was the sound of my grief. I had no idea until now that it was written in a similar moment of Chopin's life. What a masterpiece.
Here I am, again😮 on Jan 11, 2024 and here in Indiana we are expecting 12" of snow which will provide the perfect atmosphere for watching this awesome analysis video..Why? Because the music of Chopin is so moving and beautiful...But I can listen to Chopin on many different channels so why this one?..Because Greg's enthusiasm and understanding of Chopin's music is deep and articulates both in words and in playing in a way that seems to fit me like a puzzle piece...perfectly!😂
Your interpretation of this piece is beyond amazing. I truly feel like you captured the soul of Chopin in every moment of this video. Beautiful and wonderful as always Greg! I think I am going to binge all the Chopin videos you've uploaded ha
Thank you for the analysis. This video was really helpful to understand the story behind this piece. I would say that if the doppio movimento part is a run, then the ending is just the pure tiredness of Chopin's. At least that is what I feel when I play the end of this Nocturne, tiredness and pain that is caused by something terrible that happened in the past. Greetings from Slovakia :)
It's like a volcano of a piece, isn't it? The smooth and terribly sad beginning, the beautiful chorale always makes me think of lying in the sun on a summer afternoon, dragging your fingers through glassy water , but THEN! The rumblings coming up through the ground... the emotions fighting to get up to the surface like lava. Then it erupts! Love your discussion points and love for the piece. Thank you!
I left this Nocturne a while back. But I come back to it with lots of pleasure. Your way of teaching music is fabulous. I always wanted to attend a music school. And, through your videos, dear Greg, I am realizing a dream. For me, it is not easy. I have to study little by little every day. So, the first page, for now, hands separatedly and then together. Yours explanations show me the way. Thank you dear Greg for helping me so much in music.
I have been working on this for about a month and a half and I find it sad and beautiful. Thank you for educating us on what was going on in Chopin's life. Whenever I begin practicing a new piece I'm always wondering what was going on in the mind and emotions of the composer. Since the death of my father it seems some of these nocturnes match that sense of sadness abd loss. Love your story too about your difficult piano lesson.
Each time when i listen this Nocturno in fantastic interpretation of Alexei Sultanov, I'm so excited in a such indescribable way. So much tension and like something want to explode. Thank you very much for your interesting analysys of this beautiful Chopin's Nocturno!
You have changed my approach to the first section by saying it is a March. The cording in the last section shows Chopin's genius. So rich and satisfying. Thanks for this lesson.
Love your passion for the piece. Taking each section and really diving into the thought, emotion & state of mind of Chopin, is very helpful for those of us trying to learn more than just the notes on the page. Many thanks and enjoyed your performance at the end. A+
I'm very thankful to you because you have taught me how to play Chopin's music in a way that now I can understand and feel his pieces the same way I feel my own emotions.
I semantically interpret this piece much differently, and I don't feel that it's depressing or evocative of evil at all. I agree the first part is expressing morbid statements, but that emotion comes mostly from the sad march, like you explained. It's C minor, but Chopin constantly plays on the ambiguity with E♭ major. The movement upward, and the flourishes suggest silver linings, before it drops to the bottom C and moving on, again not settling unambiguously on major or minor. Then the poco piu lento part - which no one seems to ever focus much on, but I think it's the most beautiful thing Chopin wrote and I tear up every time I hear it - it's blissful but also modulates upward towards something. I find it less "eternity in heaven" and more "pastoral" - hopeful of a bright future. When the aggressive triplets set in, I don't feel that it's a evil creeping in, but a newfound confidence in that hope, like an epiphany. What was a subtle build up suddenly flares up into a euphoric climax, asserting the "light" with as much force as one could muster. And as if there's nothing else to add after that, it unceremoniously returns to the originally morbid motif, but now there's life and energy. It's not euphoric, sure, but it's not so sad, dark, hopeless. It's back to reality, but the hope, the spirit, the spark - whatever you want to call it - remains. Eventually, we know an end is coming and it's difficult, but this is a fact of life. The last melody remembers the journey contentedly, with a little curiosity of what could come next... and then a simple, peaceful death.
i found a very interesting interpretation somewhere on youtube a while ago, it stated that the piece is the reversed story arc of a soldier which makes a lot of sense to me
@@nandovancreij The hope is the meandering climb from C major to D to G, with all sorts of diminished and minor color in between that gives it so much substance. The chromatic repetition is an existential push, borne out of the hope, which remains till the end of the piece. Yep, this is just my perspective.
This video was randomly recommended to me and I'm glad I saw it! This is personally one of my favorite pieces because it really brings out that sense of tragedy and loss. With this piece, I've always imagined a narrative of someone like a dishonored warrior trying to redeem himself: the piece starting slowly with internal struggles over past failures, slowly working up the inspiration for one final battle in the middle section, and then going all out in a blaze of glory in the doppio movement where he finally redeems himself but also falls in the process, ending with - as you say - a sort of calm ascent up to the heavens. Very insightful analysis! I shared a lot of the same sentiments you presented while learning a whole lot more!
Thank you Greg for your explanations concerning Nocturne N°1 from F. Chopin. I find it absolutedly wonderful to be able to learn this way. Thank you so much for giving us this Nocturne in concert in Japan. It is a beautiful gift.
Dear Greg, I thank you very much for the experience you offered us with this lecture. You are friendly taking us by hand helping us to discover the secret and subtle preciousness folded across the musical structure and texture of this masterpiece. Although joy and pain are dimensions we all share and are consecrated in this nocturne, often our daily grind makes us deaf and “unprepared” to reach that state of soul that allows us to be touched and healed by the poetry and beauty contained in great music like this. You are helping us to recenter with our Inner self to become able to be touched by the balsamic beauty of this music. I am mostly grateful and admire your artistry and generous spirit 🙏
Hi Greg, what a fabulous explaination. I wished having such explaination during my childhood. You are a great inspiration. All the best for you and please go on…
SO WONDERFUL AS ALWAYS AND IMPORTANT!!!!! Thank you for one of my favourite Chopin's Nocturnes in an excellent rendition and for your analysis/tutorial, your lesson will be helpful for many pianists (I watch this great video now), again my best regards, have a happy weekend. Joanna
Thank you for sharing your personal story alongside your analysis of this nocturne. I’m not musician, and my acquaintance to Chopin is quite recent. I regret not having discovered this world long time ago. I have planned to watch all of your back numbers in your YT channel. Greetings from Norway
Your analysis is as always, so insightful! Thanks for playing the slow beginning and the “fleeing” section back and forth, it’s wonderful to be able to compare them side by side.
UA-cam algorithm brings me here, and I really love your analysis man!! I have been trying to understand this piece for months, and your analysis, your humble, your tonation, your feeling put into your speech is INCREDIBLE!! Gonna check your channel now. Hope you find this cmt!!
Thank you Greg for playing Chopin as you do and explaining the way you explain Chopin. I will meditate on this Nocturne. I am taking a few days off, a little holiday. I will be back. See you again soon.
Gosh... you really bring these pieces to life. We are so lucky to have you doing these series. Also, very potent performance! It seemed like, as you were playing the final notes, you were struggling to calm back down. :)
@@gregniemczuk To clarify, I meant that, you struggling to calm down was a testament to how absorbed you were in your performance and how power ful it was as a result. :)
The biggest mistake I hear many pianists make is trying to duplicate the left hand from the intro in the recapitulation, where you have this pronounced, loud “boom-Boom” throughout, as in the A Section. I think the better way to approach this is to have it more subtle in the background, and maybe emphasize it in select bars. Many years ago I went on a mission to find the best Op 48 no 1. I listened to over five dozen professional performances. What I found is that many people do well in the intro, but the last section is bad, and often the middle, too. So when I was assessing them, I placed more attention on the last part. And the performance that shined over everyone else was Fou Ts’ong. It’s very virtuosic, passionate, technically flawless. It is on UA-cam, but it’s low bitrate and not satisfying like the CD.
Bravo...oh... I had my copy of Eigeldinger's book open and then searched for you here. Your lesson opened windows to a deeper appreciation of Chopin's music and the man. Priceless. Thank you.
Dziękuję za zaangażowanie. Zacząłem od pobieżnego słuchania Chopina... bo coś wypada wiedzieć mieszkając w kraju nad Wisłą, teraz odwiedzam Żelazową Wolę raz do roku i oglądam Pana analizy :)
This Nocturne is a close second after Ballade 1 for me. I think it radiates dignity through and through. Dignity in very difficult circumstances, when hope is gone, when your cause is lost, when the ship is sinking, standing broken, yet dignified against all the odds. As a real Gentleman/Lady, no screaming, no complaining, no visible tears. You can be ridiculed, you can be beaten and shunned. But what remains is your dignity till the very end. Picking up your speculation about Wodzinska, this fits even better. :) All that Frederic had left after he got refused by the Wodzinski family was his dignity. He had lost against a Skarbek which must have humbled him a lot, he was put into his place. So he walked off, humiliated, but carrying his head in dignity. Metaphorically spoken. I'm not hoping to play this precious gem of a piece any time soon (still practising op. 28/15 :D). But one can dream, and I really love the new perspectives I get from your analysis videos!
Thank you so much for this video. I am including this nocturne on a program I am performing next month and the Chopin has been challenging for me. My teacher says he thinks I'm playing it really well and he loves much of my interpretation (although of course there are always endless notes on what to do better), but you have given me some new ways to think about it and I appreciate this. My program is all nocturnes, although only one is Chopin. I so want to make it the best that I can.
Bravo!! It sounds very exciting! I'm happy to be an inspiration. Find your story behind this music. I'm sure it will be wonderful!!! Let me know how it went!
Thanks really for this amazing analysis. I like this nocturne a lot and it always touches my heart. There should be some reasons behind. You tried to tell me some stories and interpretations which behind the notes. Thanks again for these detail explanations.
Amazing video. Though I have to say that I don't agree that the evil wins in this nocturne. There is a struggle between angels and demons in the middle going on for the soul of the "protagonist", but in the doppio movimento section, I get the sense that the protagonist now starts moving through the same suffering as before but with renewed vigour. Still with pain, but at least he is now moving again. It ends sad, because the suffering is still there, but he is still living and pushing through. The same is true for Bach's Chaconne from violin partita 2 (which you absolutely must listen to if you haven't; it is in my opinion Bach's greatest romantic work, way ahead of his time). In the Chaconne, you get the sense that Bach is expressing a great personal suffering (possibly the death of his first wife), and in the middle section you can almost feel how Bach describes God comforting Bach, almost like a musical embrace. Despite this, the music ends on a dark and tragic note. I highly doubt that Bach meant to portray a despair so strong that it implied that evil won, considering that he was a devout Christian to the end. Rather, it is an acceptance of the truth that we must live on through suffering towards our true goal (heaven), knowing that we won't always feel that comforting embrace, but at least we'll know from our memory that God is always there.
29:17 Almost sounds like roadwork outside of the church ;) Jokes aside, I love this nocturne and I love this series. 32:37 Has to be one of my favorite moments in all of Chopin's music. Thank you for inspiring pianists all around the world and spreading the music of Chopin!
My teacher gave me this nocturne to work on. I wanted to play it for a long time. But I've always been too sensitive. Often when I get to the final climax, I resist putting more emotion into it because it's just too heavy for me. I've only been able to take it when performing with an audience. Truly a kind of music that cannot be recreated.
Hello Greg! OMG...I stumbled upon your site and so enjoyed listening to your lectures. I am currently revisiting Chopin's Nocturne in c sharp minor and loved the history regarding his writing of this piece. You are truly a wonderful teacher and pianist and I look forward to your videos. Thank you, thank you, thank you for your time and talent...all the best to you...Nick
Thank you Nick! I appreciate your effort to write this comment and express your feelings. It's the best prize for the ahead work which I have done creating those videos. Thank you and enjoy them!!! Good luck!
I watched this again because it is my favorite, and I can really imagine how difficult this is to play if it for demonstration purposes..so this would require 100 % concentration.
No, on listening to it yet again... I don't think it's all this tragic. My reading is as follows. Part A: a summer night with a huge moon in the sky, a leasurely walk through a beautiful garden full of flowers and smells. Part B: a distant thunder, a storm is coming. Part C: we run hurriedly back home through heavy pummeling rain. Coda: we arrive just as the rain stops... Everything slows down, we catch our breath.
@lorrainesilvers elegant? Tango? I can kind of see it in the beginning but only the beginning. For the whole piece I have a hard time seeing any of that. What do you hear that's making you think that? Do you see the whole piece that way?
Greg absolutely fabulous anecdote on your life and experience in Ny city, also I love your referral and direct quote from the Chopin book on his students' opinion on 48 no 1. I have been watching your lessons and videos because I love the music and where I live there is nobody else who can enjoy this genre like me. I am not very good at playing piano but it is a wish of mine.
I think it is a name repeated with longing and anger and resignation. It need not be the name of a specific person. It may even be the name of his life.
Hello Greg, I didn't know you but for some reason I found your channel, And the truth is that it is very interesting and very nice the way you analyze chopan's masterpieces how right you are how much experience you have, you are a great pianist and I thank you very much for all the analysis what do you do in particular this, is my favorite nocturne, true very sad but it is the one I like the most, I can't play it, actually only play 4 nocturnes, I am totally self-taught I never studied piano I don't even know how to read notes but I can play them through technology, thanks to synthesia, Congratulations again, Greetings from México
Hola!! Muchísimas gracias! Es increíble cómo tú de México puedes ver mis vídeos. Me encantan tus palabras! Estoy feliz de saber que te gustan mis vídeos! Es importante. Ojalá un día pueda tocar conciertos en tu país y podamos encontrarnos! Saludos desde Polonia!
@@gregniemczuk además es una sorpresa que sabes hablar español cuando vengas a México Con gusto te recibiría en mi casa Yo tengo un piano Y aunque soy médico pediatra neumólogo me gusta mucho tocar piano tengo amigos pianistas y Próximamente incluso va a venir a casa un pianista imponente de talla internacional que posiblemente tú conoces Vladimir petrov de tal manera que si un día vienes a México aquí puedes quedarte
@@j.r.torres6790 maravilloso!!! Si, estudio español. He tocado conciertos en Ecuador, Perú, Columbia, Brasil, Costa Rica pero nunca en México desafortunadamente. Tengo que buscar oportunidades y lugares allí. Busca mi entrevista en español en UA-cam! Escribe : niemczuk entrevista. Saludos!
FYI: In the very first published edition of this piece the doppio movimento section does not have a diynamic marking! The pp was added by later publishers.
Alas alas❤ if only I could play like you. I have almost mastered the first beautiful part. But such skill and agility you display I can not try to approach. You're tops🎉
@@gregniemczuk thank you for your vote of confidence! I hear the deeply moving Chopin pieces and I am so moved by him, by his very heart. His tragic life - I hear it flowing from his fingers. At age 72 now - 💅🏼 My hours can be filled with practice and accomplishing several bars gives me great joy. Your rich guidance is very very helpful. Many thanks,💓 Teacher😉 P.S my nails are piano appropriate ☺️
@@thewordbtrue2461 never loose the passion! I have an online 83-year-old student from Washington DC. He improves every day and I can see so much progress! I've been teaching him for 3 years now!
@@thewordbtrue2461 we could always try if you ever feel ready. I can try to guide you. Maybe it will work for you. Lesson must not even be every week - you can decide what works best for you. I love motivating people to realize their dreams in music
It's not like Nocturne, but it's my favorite song in Nocturne. Is it a chorale style while intense emotions are increasing steadily? Choir? light? of I feel melancholy and sadness in such a part. Thank you for your wonderful analysis video.
jak dobrze rozumieć nie tylko sercem, ale i kompozycyjnie ...bardzo ciekawe doświadczenie...to ciastko smakuje inaczej ...jest lepsze i pachnie różami...dziękuję
Greg, thank you a lot for one more amazing video! It is so interesting to watch your analysis. You’re so emotional and so sincere! The way you treat music is inspiring! I liked so much the story about your lesson. I think every student pianist has faced problem like this. That one day some teacher shouting at you so much, you feel like the worst musician in the world😅 This nocturne is so tricky in technical way. It seems not super hard to play like etude op25, 11 for example. But I’m studying doppio movemento like I’m studying octave etude😅
I love your videos. A question about the Nocturne op 32 no 1. My Schirmer addition has the last cord as manor but i have heard recordings that are not major. Sounds terrible. What do you do? Thanks. Ps played this op 48 #1 and learned the 2nd Scherzo. Love Chopin!
If Chopin had only produced this nocturne in C minor op. 48 throughout all his life, he would still have been the great and fantastic composer that he was.
I wish I could forget this piece and have the chance of listen to it for the first time, in this day I would fall in love for the Piano one more time...
Thanks for this beautiful comment. It's so deep and beautiful! I think I agree with you!
I wrote this kind of comment to something else but I forgot what it was 🥲
Thank you for this gift
Absolutely sublime
I cannot stop crying when I listen to this piece of music, specially if interpreted with such a passion. Not everyone can play it well
Thank you for sharing this deep, profound lesson which was so complete and touching. I am 54 right now, and I wonder what I would have done with piano if I had the possibility of hearing such masterclasses on UA-cam when I was 14. It's like going to conservatory without having attended it. It's so lucky for all of us and for humanity itself that you and many other great artists, men and musicians, are willing to share your knowledge and emotions with us. We all grow together. Thanks a lot!
I'm trying to make the world more beautiful place! Thanks for your words!!
Thank you so much for this great Master class. Thankyou for sharing with all of us this deep impressions. Im surge it Will get my interpretation one level above thaks tô your generosity. I hope tô see your performance here in Brazil in Rio some Day. I wish you The Best.
@@gregniemczuk beautiful ❤️
to me, you are the greatest music teacher Mr.Niemczuk. Thank you so so much for the music, teaching, storytelling, and motivation!! One of the greatest emotional achievements of piano music and technique.
Thank you so much!!!! You have no idea how much it means to me and how special and satisfied you make me feel. Music, performing and teaching is all the love of my life!
It seems fate has brought me to this piece. I wanted to learn Op15 No. 3, but I accidentally downloaded the score for Op 48 No.1 and started playing it. Hey, I thought, this is not the piece I am looking for, but it sounds amazing and I have definitely heard it before. A very iconic piece. I felt compelled to keep learning and within a couple of days learned to play the introduction (the first 2 pages in my edition). It's definitely one of the most satisfying pieces of music I have ever had the pleasure to play. As Greg said "it comes straight from the composers soul". Probably I lack the pianistic skill to learn the whole piece, but the introduction is quite enough for me. I am in heaven.
Yes!!! Do play it!! It makes us happier. Even just the first part!
I love the way you describe Chopin’s music, I feel that you share his artistry in such wonderful words. I have recently begun teaching myself this piece, and the sheer weight of it makes it an especially emotional one for me.
Thank you Ricky!
when I listen to this piece, I imagine someone whose heart has been broken, standing behind the railing of a bridge, ready to jump.
Suddenly, he starts to recall good memories, and then wonder if life could be worth living after all.
but he realizes that in every moment of joy he recalls hides the overwhelming presence of the loved one, wich now gives all those happy memories a bitter taste, constantly reminding what was lost.
This realization turns his dispair into anger, frustration and finally determination.
And enventually, the helpless lover end up jumping...
Unbelievable description....... congratulations
Shit!
This was the piece that opened my previously closed heart to Chopin and was a portal for me into the world of classical music in general. It was like being plunged into the richest and most magnificent realm of intense and powerfully wide ranging emotion, deeper that anything I'd preciously experience listening to music, almost transcendent in fact, and I was determined to learn the piano in the hope of one day playing this nocturnten years on I now have a growing list of pieces I aspire to play but your superb, and beautifully articulated tutorial helped me understand why my soul felt/feels so connected to this particular piece and the doors it opened within me - to play it is still my ultimate goal , maybe one day I'll get there. Your concert performance was really wonderful ❤ I've only just discovered your channel , what a rich source of expertise and knowledge you are sharing, thank you so much.
Thank you! Welcome to my music world! Indeed, for a Chopin lover you can find such analyses of almost every single Chopin's piece of music! It was a long journey during the dark times of COVID-19..... Enjoy!
GOAT nocturne from the whole universe by far.
Yes Greg. Absolutely right that it blows you from the first hearing. In the 50s I bought, a second hand 78 of. Rubinstein playing this nocturne and I’ve been hooked ever since. Unbelievably incredible composition which never fades with repeated listening.
The fight between light and evil... This is so accurate! It gave me goosebumps! 😱
Bravo Monsieur! Excellent! I love the drama and your interpretation inspires me to learn this piece. Your story about your lesson reminded me of the last lesson that I had where I left in tears never to return and I wish I had known what your friend had told you that you met on the street, I might have taken things a little differently.
Needless to say, I have not had a lesson for two years because of that, it was very intimidating, everything that could be criticized was criticized, my tone, dynamics, articulation, time, my shoes…he criticize my shoes! I mean really! I left feeling like a bull in a china shop!
The more lessons I had with him (I worked with him for about nine months) the worse I got, the more distracted I got and felt more and more worthless. We had one ongoing battle where he would never help me with any kind of technical difficulties he only wanted to do interpretations and I felt I couldn’t do the interpretations unless I could play the damn notes! The interpretations were just the icing on the cake, I wasn’t worried about that. And if all that was really complementary then I must be one hell of a pianist! Anyway I’m glad I’m not alone. 😂
Hahahaha, wow... Yeah, so you understand me! But I don't approve such way of teaching at all!!
Criticising shoes (!!!) Is definitely way too much!
I have been sitting here for 48 minutes and 22 seconds hanging on your words, that does not happen often, a stellar performance. It was fascinating and inspiring. Really a great lecture, one of those that you will remember forever, you are so passionate, it is contagious. Thanks a lot, but now I have to go practicing.
I am so happy to read that!!! Thank you so much! It keeps me going and making new videos!
Really interesting analysis. Playing the matching phrases of the first and third sections is an excellent idea, to show the parallels. You also play alternative ways the music could have been written (e.g. 7:52 and 18:14) which really helps me understand the music better. I don't think I've seen other people do this.
I like the Wodzinska interpretation (though I'm not well read on Chopin's life) because this piece seems, to me, to express an unutterable loneliness. I imagine Chopin alone some night, sitting at a cafe overlooking the Seine, thinking of her marriage to someone else.
For what it's worth, this is how I see it (timings are from this video):
42:20 - 42:38: I'm so lonely.
42:38 - 42:59: I'll be this lonely until I die.
42:59 - 43:40: Some fond memories of her.
43:40 - 44:15: Memories bring quiet tears.
Second section starts with acceptance - it's for the best - she's happy - I'm managing. But the sorrow and grief well up with the interrupting octaves, and no matter how hard he tries to hold on to the thin serenity, it breaks down into an emotional crisis (46:01) and uncontrolled weeping (third section).
In the coda (47:46), the notes going up are his hopes, escaping into the air, leaving him only with sorrow (47:56)
Needless to say, this does not speak well of George Sand.
Fantastic and very emotional, thorough and beautiful interpretation!
The performance at the end of the video was amazing! Thanks for sharing!
I wouldn't have quit the piano if I had the chance to watch your video when I was 12. And now being 46 year old I'm in love with chopin's music again. Thank u so much.
Thank you!!! You can take it up again always!!!!
As an early intermediate player, these videos are so fascinating to me and I always learn so much from them. Thank you so much sir for continuing to make these amazing videos.
Thank you so much for these lectures! I am 16 years old and Chopin is one the most important things in my life. This is my favorite nocturne and I desperately want to play it well, the way Chopin intended and your video helps so much! 💜
Thank you so much for watching my videos and for the comment! You made my day
Great lecture. I was especially moved because I came across this piece shortly after my own breakup and it really spoke to me during that time. It was the sound of my grief. I had no idea until now that it was written in a similar moment of Chopin's life. What a masterpiece.
Thanks for the comment!
Here I am, again😮 on Jan 11, 2024 and here in Indiana we are expecting 12" of snow which will provide the perfect atmosphere for watching this awesome analysis video..Why? Because the music of Chopin is so moving and beautiful...But I can listen to Chopin on many different channels so why this one?..Because Greg's enthusiasm and understanding of Chopin's music is deep and articulates both in words and in playing in a way that seems to fit me like a puzzle piece...perfectly!😂
You made me smile so much!!! Thank you so much for this comment and being so sincere and enthusiastic! I am grateful!!!
It is awesome to listen to the music of my favorite composer by such a smart guy
Hugs from Brazil
Perfect video as always
Obrigado!
Your interpretation of this piece is beyond amazing. I truly feel like you captured the soul of Chopin in every moment of this video.
Beautiful and wonderful as always Greg! I think I am going to binge all the Chopin videos you've uploaded ha
Wow!! Wonderful! Thank you so much, I appreciate these words! Have fun, there are like 200 of them! I hope you'll enjoy them!
Thank you for the analysis. This video was really helpful to understand the story behind this piece. I would say that if the doppio movimento part is a run, then the ending is just the pure tiredness of Chopin's. At least that is what I feel when I play the end of this Nocturne, tiredness and pain that is caused by something terrible that happened in the past. Greetings from Slovakia :)
It's like a volcano of a piece, isn't it? The smooth and terribly sad beginning, the beautiful chorale always makes me think of lying in the sun on a summer afternoon, dragging your fingers through glassy water , but THEN! The rumblings coming up through the ground... the emotions fighting to get up to the surface like lava. Then it erupts! Love your discussion points and love for the piece. Thank you!
Yeeees!! Such a beautiful and poetic description!! I love it!! Thanks for watching!
I left this Nocturne a while back. But I come back to it with lots of pleasure. Your way of teaching music is fabulous. I always wanted to attend a music school. And, through your videos, dear Greg, I am realizing a dream. For me, it is not easy. I have to study little by little every day. So, the first page, for now, hands separatedly and then together. Yours explanations show me the way. Thank you dear Greg for helping me so much in music.
Thank you so much! So good to read your comment again!
I have been working on this for about a month and a half and I find it sad and beautiful.
Thank you for educating us on what was going on in Chopin's life.
Whenever I begin practicing a new piece I'm always wondering what was going on in the mind and emotions of the composer. Since the death of my father it seems some of these nocturnes match that sense of sadness abd loss.
Love your story too about your difficult piano lesson.
Yes! This is definitely a correct approach. We should try to express composer's emotions at first and enrich them with our experiences!
Each time when i listen this Nocturno in fantastic interpretation of Alexei Sultanov, I'm so excited in a such indescribable way. So much tension and like something want to explode. Thank you very much for your interesting analysys of this beautiful Chopin's Nocturno!
О, да! Ноктюрн в исполнении Алексея Султанова обладает особой силой воздействия. Вечная память Великому Художнику!
You have changed my approach to the first section by saying it is a March. The cording in the last section shows Chopin's genius. So rich and satisfying. Thanks for this lesson.
Love your passion for the piece. Taking each section and really diving into the thought, emotion & state of mind of Chopin, is very helpful for those of us trying to learn more than just the notes on the page. Many thanks and enjoyed your performance at the end. A+
Thank you so much!! You're invited to my other videos as well. Greetings from Poland!
thank you for the lecture, as I currently don't have a professor to guide me and started to learn op 48 n 1 on my own.
Oh, I see... It can be hard. But keep going!! Love towards the music and Chopin will guide you!
This video is the most precious gem itself. Thank you tremendously.
Thank you so much!!!
I'm very thankful to you because you have taught me how to play Chopin's music in a way that now I can understand and feel his pieces the same way I feel my own emotions.
I'm so happy to hear that!
Aand finally, the best nocturne and personally my favorite of all of chopin's c minor pieces (Revolutionary, ocean...). Great analysis!
Thank you so much!
I don’t think there is a best nocturne. It’s very subjective when it comes to grading Chopin’s work.
I semantically interpret this piece much differently, and I don't feel that it's depressing or evocative of evil at all. I agree the first part is expressing morbid statements, but that emotion comes mostly from the sad march, like you explained. It's C minor, but Chopin constantly plays on the ambiguity with E♭ major. The movement upward, and the flourishes suggest silver linings, before it drops to the bottom C and moving on, again not settling unambiguously on major or minor. Then the poco piu lento part - which no one seems to ever focus much on, but I think it's the most beautiful thing Chopin wrote and I tear up every time I hear it - it's blissful but also modulates upward towards something. I find it less "eternity in heaven" and more "pastoral" - hopeful of a bright future. When the aggressive triplets set in, I don't feel that it's a evil creeping in, but a newfound confidence in that hope, like an epiphany. What was a subtle build up suddenly flares up into a euphoric climax, asserting the "light" with as much force as one could muster. And as if there's nothing else to add after that, it unceremoniously returns to the originally morbid motif, but now there's life and energy. It's not euphoric, sure, but it's not so sad, dark, hopeless. It's back to reality, but the hope, the spirit, the spark - whatever you want to call it - remains. Eventually, we know an end is coming and it's difficult, but this is a fact of life. The last melody remembers the journey contentedly, with a little curiosity of what could come next... and then a simple, peaceful death.
hmm i just cant interpret fast chromatic octaves as hope
It's very beautiful what you're writing. The beauty of music is that everyone can feel it differently and.....everyone is right!! ☺️☺️☺️☺️☺️
i found a very interesting interpretation somewhere on youtube a while ago, it stated that the piece is the reversed story arc of a soldier which makes a lot of sense to me
@@nandovancreij The hope is the meandering climb from C major to D to G, with all sorts of diminished and minor color in between that gives it so much substance. The chromatic repetition is an existential push, borne out of the hope, which remains till the end of the piece.
Yep, this is just my perspective.
This video was randomly recommended to me and I'm glad I saw it! This is personally one of my favorite pieces because it really brings out that sense of tragedy and loss.
With this piece, I've always imagined a narrative of someone like a dishonored warrior trying to redeem himself: the piece starting slowly with internal struggles over past failures, slowly working up the inspiration for one final battle in the middle section, and then going all out in a blaze of glory in the doppio movement where he finally redeems himself but also falls in the process, ending with - as you say - a sort of calm ascent up to the heavens.
Very insightful analysis! I shared a lot of the same sentiments you presented while learning a whole lot more!
Beautiful description. You must be a very sensitive person to like and understand this piece so deeply. Thank you for your comment!
I will meditate with the end. But it is like poetry. It evaporates in the sky.............Thank you dear Greg.
Thank you Greg for your explanations concerning Nocturne N°1 from F. Chopin. I find it absolutedly wonderful to be able to learn this way. Thank you so much for giving us this Nocturne in concert in Japan. It is a beautiful gift.
Thank you Elisa!
This is my favorite, too! Love your analysis. I can feel the pain in my heart.
Dear Greg, I thank you very much for the experience you offered us with this lecture. You are friendly taking us by hand helping us to discover the secret and subtle preciousness folded across the musical structure and texture of this masterpiece.
Although joy and pain are dimensions we all share and are consecrated in this nocturne, often our daily grind makes us deaf and “unprepared” to reach that state of soul that allows us to be touched and healed by the poetry and beauty contained in great music like this. You are helping us to recenter with our Inner self to become able to be touched by the balsamic beauty of this music. I am mostly grateful and admire your artistry and generous spirit 🙏
Thank you very much!!!!
Hi Greg, what a fabulous explaination. I wished having such explaination during my childhood. You are a great inspiration. All the best for you and please go on…
SO WONDERFUL AS ALWAYS AND IMPORTANT!!!!! Thank you for one of my favourite Chopin's Nocturnes in an excellent rendition and for your analysis/tutorial, your lesson will be helpful for many pianists (I watch this great video now), again my best regards, have a happy weekend. Joanna
Thank you dear Joanna!
Thank you for sharing your personal story alongside your analysis of this nocturne. I’m not musician, and my acquaintance to Chopin is quite recent. I regret not having discovered this world long time ago. I have planned to watch all of your back numbers in your YT channel. Greetings from Norway
Thank you very much!
Your analysis is so much fun, inspiring and just makes sense! Thanks so much! Now I just want to play this mind-blowing music all day long
It's so wonderful to hear!!! Thank you!
Your analysis is as always, so insightful! Thanks for playing the slow beginning and the “fleeing” section back and forth, it’s wonderful to be able to compare them side by side.
It’s such a joy listening to your videos
so precious news about the piece you have given !!!!!!!!!! great master !!
UA-cam algorithm brings me here, and I really love your analysis man!! I have been trying to understand this piece for months, and your analysis, your humble, your tonation, your feeling put into your speech is INCREDIBLE!! Gonna check your channel now. Hope you find this cmt!!
Thank you so much!!! Enjoy other videos about ALL Chopin's music!
Thank you Greg for playing Chopin as you do and explaining the way you explain Chopin. I will meditate on this Nocturne. I am taking a few days off, a little holiday. I will be back. See you again soon.
Always when I watch your analysis you inspire me to play ... Thank you Mr Grzegorzu 😉
Thank you for this.....awesome explanition! Love your way of interpretate it.
Thank you dear Jorge!
I appreciate your comment. Feel invited to watch other analysies as well!
Gosh... you really bring these pieces to life. We are so lucky to have you doing these series. Also, very potent performance! It seemed like, as you were playing the final notes, you were struggling to calm back down. :)
Yes... In this Nocturne it's hard because this music is so emotional! Thanks for watching!
@@gregniemczuk To clarify, I meant that, you struggling to calm down was a testament to how absorbed you were in your performance and how power ful it was as a result. :)
Thank you so much, it’s always something new and productive in your videos. 🌹🌹🌹
The biggest mistake I hear many pianists make is trying to duplicate the left hand from the intro in the recapitulation, where you have this pronounced, loud “boom-Boom” throughout, as in the A Section. I think the better way to approach this is to have it more subtle in the background, and maybe emphasize it in select bars.
Many years ago I went on a mission to find the best Op 48 no 1. I listened to over five dozen professional performances. What I found is that many people do well in the intro, but the last section is bad, and often the middle, too. So when I was assessing them, I placed more attention on the last part. And the performance that shined over everyone else was Fou Ts’ong. It’s very virtuosic, passionate, technically flawless. It is on UA-cam, but it’s low bitrate and not satisfying like the CD.
Really interesting analysis. Thank you so much for sharing.
Anyway, after my comments, thank you Greg for this wonderful introduction to the piece and I really like your interpretation.
Bravo...oh... I had my copy of Eigeldinger's book open and then searched for you here. Your lesson opened windows to a deeper appreciation of Chopin's music and the man. Priceless. Thank you.
Great!!!
made me cry
Dziękuję za zaangażowanie. Zacząłem od pobieżnego słuchania Chopina... bo coś wypada wiedzieć mieszkając w kraju nad Wisłą, teraz odwiedzam Żelazową Wolę raz do roku i oglądam Pana analizy :)
Pięknie!!!! Bardzo się cieszę!
Me encanta este análisis. Va derecho a la explicación de las motivaciones expresivas de la musica de Chopin.🇪🇸
Muchas gracias
This Nocturne is a close second after Ballade 1 for me.
I think it radiates dignity through and through. Dignity in very difficult circumstances, when hope is gone, when your cause is lost, when the ship is sinking, standing broken, yet dignified against all the odds. As a real Gentleman/Lady, no screaming, no complaining, no visible tears. You can be ridiculed, you can be beaten and shunned. But what remains is your dignity till the very end.
Picking up your speculation about Wodzinska, this fits even better. :)
All that Frederic had left after he got refused by the Wodzinski family was his dignity. He had lost against a Skarbek which must have humbled him a lot, he was put into his place. So he walked off, humiliated, but carrying his head in dignity. Metaphorically spoken.
I'm not hoping to play this precious gem of a piece any time soon (still practising op. 28/15 :D). But one can dream, and I really love the new perspectives I get from your analysis videos!
Amazing. Thank you so much for this precious comment!
Thank you for this analysis, I’m practicing this piece and I really want to interpret this in its whole complexity.
It deserves to be performed like you say! Wonderful! It's very deep. Good luck with that!
That was really lovely and in depth. Thank you so much for sharing
Thank you for watching!
Thank you so much for this video. I am including this nocturne on a program I am performing next month and the Chopin has been challenging for me. My teacher says he thinks I'm playing it really well and he loves much of my interpretation (although of course there are always endless notes on what to do better), but you have given me some new ways to think about it and I appreciate this. My program is all nocturnes, although only one is Chopin. I so want to make it the best that I can.
Bravo!! It sounds very exciting! I'm happy to be an inspiration. Find your story behind this music. I'm sure it will be wonderful!!! Let me know how it went!
LOVE. IT. ❤
Thanks again for sharing your knowledge, insight and love for this music :)
Thank you!
Thanks really for this amazing analysis. I like this nocturne a lot and it always touches my heart. There should be some reasons behind. You tried to tell me some stories and interpretations which behind the notes. Thanks again for these detail explanations.
Thank you for watching!
Amazing video. Though I have to say that I don't agree that the evil wins in this nocturne. There is a struggle between angels and demons in the middle going on for the soul of the "protagonist", but in the doppio movimento section, I get the sense that the protagonist now starts moving through the same suffering as before but with renewed vigour. Still with pain, but at least he is now moving again. It ends sad, because the suffering is still there, but he is still living and pushing through.
The same is true for Bach's Chaconne from violin partita 2 (which you absolutely must listen to if you haven't; it is in my opinion Bach's greatest romantic work, way ahead of his time). In the Chaconne, you get the sense that Bach is expressing a great personal suffering (possibly the death of his first wife), and in the middle section you can almost feel how Bach describes God comforting Bach, almost like a musical embrace. Despite this, the music ends on a dark and tragic note. I highly doubt that Bach meant to portray a despair so strong that it implied that evil won, considering that he was a devout Christian to the end. Rather, it is an acceptance of the truth that we must live on through suffering towards our true goal (heaven), knowing that we won't always feel that comforting embrace, but at least we'll know from our memory that God is always there.
Yes, I hear it as a March. I am trying to learn the first phrase. It is heavy and sad. Thank you so much.
thank you so much for all your lovely videos, i appreciate them very much!
Thank you Anna
29:17 Almost sounds like roadwork outside of the church ;)
Jokes aside, I love this nocturne and I love this series. 32:37 Has to be one of my favorite moments in all of Chopin's music.
Thank you for inspiring pianists all around the world and spreading the music of Chopin!
Thanks for being here and commenting! Hope to see you watching my other episodes as well! Best wishes!
@@gregniemczuk I definitely will! greetings from Sweden
Amazing Greg! Much appreciated!
Wow, what a beautiful interpretation. thanks for that great video
Thank you Ariel for your comment!
My teacher gave me this nocturne to work on. I wanted to play it for a long time. But I've always been too sensitive. Often when I get to the final climax, I resist putting more emotion into it because it's just too heavy for me. I've only been able to take it when performing with an audience. Truly a kind of music that cannot be recreated.
Hello Greg! OMG...I stumbled upon your site and so enjoyed listening to your lectures. I am currently revisiting Chopin's Nocturne in c sharp minor and loved the history regarding his writing of this piece. You are truly a wonderful teacher and pianist and I look forward to your videos. Thank you, thank you, thank you for your time and talent...all the best to you...Nick
Thank you Nick! I appreciate your effort to write this comment and express your feelings. It's the best prize for the ahead work which I have done creating those videos. Thank you and enjoy them!!! Good luck!
Thank you so much. Great video.
Thanks
I watched this again because it is my favorite, and I can really imagine how difficult this is to play if it for demonstration purposes..so this would require 100 % concentration.
Tremendous!!! Incredible. Thank you!!
No, on listening to it yet again... I don't think it's all this tragic. My reading is as follows. Part A: a summer night with a huge moon in the sky, a leasurely walk through a beautiful garden full of flowers and smells. Part B: a distant thunder, a storm is coming. Part C: we run hurriedly back home through heavy pummeling rain. Coda: we arrive just as the rain stops... Everything slows down, we catch our breath.
Awesome!
I hear it as an elegant tango!
@lorrainesilvers elegant? Tango? I can kind of see it in the beginning but only the beginning. For the whole piece I have a hard time seeing any of that. What do you hear that's making you think that? Do you see the whole piece that way?
@@davisatdavis1 I hear thunder, I hear rain.
Greg absolutely fabulous anecdote on your life and experience in Ny city, also I love your referral and direct quote from the Chopin book on his students' opinion on 48 no 1. I have been watching your lessons and videos because I love the music and where I live there is nobody else who can enjoy this genre like me. I am not very good at playing piano but it is a wish of mine.
Oh, than you can be a prophet!!! You can make people in your area fall in love with this music again!!! I hope you can do it
I think it is a name repeated with longing and anger and resignation. It need not be the name of a specific person. It may even be the name of his life.
Unbelievable. Polak tłumaczący Chopina po angielsku, fantastique! Pozdrowienia od Polaka w Ameryce.
Pozdrawiam serdecznie!
Great video! Thank you so much
You're welcome!
Have you done analysis of the preludes and etudes yet? If not, I am looking forward to it.
Me too, my best regards!
Not yet. Preludes will be published in October, and Etudes in late November and December/January
Hello Greg, I didn't know you but for some reason I found your channel, And the truth is that it is very interesting and very nice the way you analyze chopan's masterpieces how right you are how much experience you have, you are a great pianist and I thank you very much for all the analysis what do you do in particular this, is my favorite nocturne, true very sad but it is the one I like the most, I can't play it, actually only play 4 nocturnes, I am totally self-taught I never studied piano I don't even know how to read notes but I can play them through technology, thanks to synthesia, Congratulations again, Greetings from México
Hola!! Muchísimas gracias! Es increíble cómo tú de México puedes ver mis vídeos. Me encantan tus palabras! Estoy feliz de saber que te gustan mis vídeos! Es importante. Ojalá un día pueda tocar conciertos en tu país y podamos encontrarnos! Saludos desde Polonia!
@@gregniemczuk además es una sorpresa que sabes hablar español cuando vengas a México Con gusto te recibiría en mi casa Yo tengo un piano Y aunque soy médico pediatra neumólogo me gusta mucho tocar piano tengo amigos pianistas y Próximamente incluso va a venir a casa un pianista imponente de talla internacional que posiblemente tú conoces Vladimir petrov de tal manera que si un día vienes a México aquí puedes quedarte
@@j.r.torres6790 maravilloso!!!
Si, estudio español. He tocado conciertos en Ecuador, Perú, Columbia, Brasil, Costa Rica pero nunca en México desafortunadamente. Tengo que buscar oportunidades y lugares allí.
Busca mi entrevista en español en UA-cam!
Escribe : niemczuk entrevista.
Saludos!
my fav internet piano teacher
Thanks!!!!!!
FYI: In the very first published edition of this piece the doppio movimento section does not have a diynamic marking! The pp was added by later publishers.
Interesting!!!
Alas alas❤ if only I could play like you. I have almost mastered the first beautiful part. But such skill and agility you display I can not try to approach. You're tops🎉
It takes time. Be patient! You'll achieve it!
@@gregniemczuk thank you for your vote of confidence! I hear the deeply moving Chopin pieces and I am so moved by him, by his very heart. His tragic life - I hear it flowing from his fingers. At age 72 now - 💅🏼
My hours can be filled with practice and accomplishing several bars gives me great joy. Your rich guidance is very very helpful.
Many thanks,💓 Teacher😉
P.S my nails are piano appropriate ☺️
@@thewordbtrue2461 never loose the passion! I have an online 83-year-old student from Washington DC. He improves every day and I can see so much progress! I've been teaching him for 3 years now!
@@gregniemczuk how fortunate is that fellow who has you as an instructor. ☺️
@@thewordbtrue2461 we could always try if you ever feel ready. I can try to guide you. Maybe it will work for you. Lesson must not even be every week - you can decide what works best for you.
I love motivating people to realize their dreams in music
It's not like Nocturne, but it's my favorite song in Nocturne. Is it a chorale style while intense emotions are increasing steadily? Choir? light? of I feel melancholy and sadness in such a part. Thank you for your wonderful analysis video.
jak dobrze rozumieć nie tylko sercem, ale i kompozycyjnie ...bardzo ciekawe doświadczenie...to ciastko smakuje inaczej ...jest lepsze i pachnie różami...dziękuję
Cieszę się!!!!!!
Nothing is better than Chopin:)
to each his own... de gustibum, non est disputandum. Please open your ears to ALL music, not only Chopin
Greg, thank you a lot for one more amazing video! It is so interesting to watch your analysis. You’re so emotional and so sincere! The way you treat music is inspiring!
I liked so much the story about your lesson. I think every student pianist has faced problem like this. That one day some teacher shouting at you so much, you feel like the worst musician in the world😅
This nocturne is so tricky in technical way. It seems not super hard to play like etude op25, 11 for example. But I’m studying doppio movemento like I’m studying octave etude😅
Yes! It's like the etude... But so beautiful!! Thank you for understanding and for your comment. I wish you all the best!
such a passionate analysis maestro, i really wanna listen to your interpretation of my favourite composer Ravel
I want! I personally recommend Vlado Perlemuter!
I love your videos. A question about the Nocturne op 32 no 1. My Schirmer addition has the last cord as manor but i have heard recordings that are not major. Sounds terrible. What do you do?
Thanks.
Ps played this op 48 #1 and learned the 2nd Scherzo. Love Chopin!
I prefer minor!
I love this
Thank you Nicholas!
thanks for this channel
Very Nice!
Great job
7:56 yooo that is beautfiul
Bravo!P.Helling
If Chopin had only produced this nocturne in C minor op. 48 throughout all his life, he would still have been the great and fantastic composer that he was.
Could you do an analysis on Rachmaninoff's Piano sonata no.2, 2nd movement? Thank you in advance😉😉😊😊🥰🥰
When I finish my Chopin project I will think about it!
@@gregniemczuk Ok, thank you very much😊