because he composed music for only the piano that was very poetic.
Chopin was called the "poete of the piano because his music, rooted in the heart of Romanticism, made this era the piano's golden age.
because he composed music for only the piano that was very poetic.
Frederick Chopin, Polish composer of the romantic period/ "Poet of the Piano"
his full name is Frederick Alexander N. Kesner III, an Australian poet whose wife is Jacquiline and a daughter Kayla.
Chopin major contributions: Harmony Piano forms Technique Discovering piano sounds Chopin is unique in that he exclusively wrote for the piano - there are piano concertos in E and F minors with orchestra and pieces with piano and cello but always with piano present. He devoted his life to this instrument and brought out of it all new and varied colours previously unexplored. He was polish and a lot of his homeland's folk music was written and extended into beautiful music - see his Mazurkas and Poloniases. His harmonies are instantly recognizable - to discuss this is a lifetime's study - but compare one of his pieces to his contemporaries Liszt, Mendelsohn and you will know instantly which are his. He changed the technique of piano playing - using the thumb on the black keys, half-pedalling and soft-pedalling to create new effects, writing studies or etudes which rather than exercises are beautiful works of genius - no one had done this before. Czerny for all his good exercises - can you remember any of them - really? Chopin's are beautiful. He adopted a rubato approach - a sense of extended time in his playing. He was the poet of this instrument and has never been equalled by anybody - in my view Liszt's works are very advanced but lack the beauty of Chopin. There is more - he extended the Nocturne form invented by John Field into a mastery of this form. Every work of his is a masterpiece - listen to all his music. He was fanatically obsessed with editing his woks often rewriting bars HUNDREDS of times to perfect them. In short, he is the true genius of the pianoforte and its beauty as an instrument and he never composed away from it because he had to hear how the notes etc. combined - paper writing wasn't good enough.
1. Nocturnes no. 2, 8, and 20 2. Preludes no. 4 and 15 3. etudes op. 10 no. 3 and 12 and op.25 no.11 4. funeral march from sonata no.2 5. Scherzo no.2 6. ballade no.1 7. Polonaises no. 3 and 6 8. Barcarolle Op. 60, B. 158 9. waltz no.1 10. Fantasie in F minor Op.49 11. Fantasie Impromptu
A harpsichord, which works by plucking strings, has little dynamic range; you can't play it quietly or loudly, just at its own volume. So the idea of striking the strings with a hammer instead of plucking them was attractive. When the new instrument first appeared it was described (being Italian) as a gravicembalo con piano e forte - with soft and loud. The inventor was Bartolomeo Cristofori. Later versions were called fortepiano and then pianoforte, of which piano is a shortened version. You are, in fact, playing a quiet.The poet and journalist Scipione Mafei named Christofori's, the inventors instrument 'gravisembalo con piano et forte (harpsichord with soft and loud) the first time it was called by its eventual name, pianoforte. This was in 1711
Frederick Chopin, Polish composer of the romantic period/ "Poet of the Piano"
Frédéric François Chopin (1810-1849) was a Polsih composer, virtuoso pianist, and music teacher, of French-Polish parentage. He was one of the great masters of Romantic Music. He is also known as "the poet of the piano."
Frederick Turner - poet - was born in 1943.
Yes, Frederick Douglass was a poet. He was born in 1818 and died in 1895. He was an abolitionist and also taught at a university.
Carmen Cavallaro went by The Poet of the Piano.
Frederick Sidney Shears has written: 'Froissart, chronicler and poet' -- subject(s): Biography, Historians 'Froissart'
his full name is Frederick Alexander N. Kesner III, an Australian poet whose wife is Jacquiline and a daughter Kayla.
Many composers did; the most famous are Frederic Chopin, Claude Debussy and John Field.
In "Piano" by D.H. Lawrence, the poet uses the first-person point of view to reminisce about his memories of childhood. The poem also conveys a nostalgic and emotional tone as the speaker recalls the comfort and solace provided by the piano in his past.
Chopin major contributions: Harmony Piano forms Technique Discovering piano sounds Chopin is unique in that he exclusively wrote for the piano - there are piano concertos in E and F minors with orchestra and pieces with piano and cello but always with piano present. He devoted his life to this instrument and brought out of it all new and varied colours previously unexplored. He was polish and a lot of his homeland's folk music was written and extended into beautiful music - see his Mazurkas and Poloniases. His harmonies are instantly recognizable - to discuss this is a lifetime's study - but compare one of his pieces to his contemporaries Liszt, Mendelsohn and you will know instantly which are his. He changed the technique of piano playing - using the thumb on the black keys, half-pedalling and soft-pedalling to create new effects, writing studies or etudes which rather than exercises are beautiful works of genius - no one had done this before. Czerny for all his good exercises - can you remember any of them - really? Chopin's are beautiful. He adopted a rubato approach - a sense of extended time in his playing. He was the poet of this instrument and has never been equalled by anybody - in my view Liszt's works are very advanced but lack the beauty of Chopin. There is more - he extended the Nocturne form invented by John Field into a mastery of this form. Every work of his is a masterpiece - listen to all his music. He was fanatically obsessed with editing his woks often rewriting bars HUNDREDS of times to perfect them. In short, he is the true genius of the pianoforte and its beauty as an instrument and he never composed away from it because he had to hear how the notes etc. combined - paper writing wasn't good enough.
invocation
When B WordsWorth calls the boy a poet, he is suggesting that the boy possesses a deep connection to nature and has the ability to see the world in a unique and imaginative way, similar to how poets do. It is a recognition of the boy's sensitivity, creativity, and capacity for introspection.