Rondo in C minor (Chopin) explained

The Rondo in C minor, Op. 1, for solo piano is Chopin's first published work, published in 1825,[1] and dedicated to "Madame de Linde", the wife of the headmaster of the Lyceum at which Chopin was studying.[2] The piece contains an "unorthodox (but entirely logical) tonal scheme".[1] The first phase begins in C minor, moving into E major, A major, then back to C minor. The second phase moves to D major, finishing in C minor for a final statement of the theme.

Chopin premiered the work at a concert on 10 June 1825 in the auditorium of the Warsaw Conservatory. The performance gained a review in the Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung of Leipzig (probably written by Chopin's teacher Józef Elsner) praising its "wealth of musical ideas".[3]

Robert Schumann wrote to his teacher Friedrich Wieck of the Rondo in 1832:

References

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Notes and References

  1. Cambridge Companion to Chopin p80, Jim Samson. Cambridge University Press, 1994.
  2. Walker (2018), p. 69
  3. Walker (2018), p. 84