for no remark. Liszt cites the second movement
(Larghetto, A flat major) of this work as a specimen
of the morceaux d’une surprenante grandeur to
be found in Chopin’s concertos and sonatas,
and mentions that the composer had a marked predilection
for it, delighting in frequently playing it. And
Schumann exclaims: “What are ten editorial
crowns compared to one such Adagio as that in the
second concerto!” The beautiful deep-toned,
love-laden cantilena, which is profusely and exquisitely
ornamented in Chopin’s characteristic style,
is interrupted by a very impressive recitative of
some length, after which the cantilena is heard again.
But criticism had better be silent, and listen here
attentively. And how shall I describe the last
movement (Allegro vivace F minor, 3-4)—its
feminine softness and rounded contours, its graceful,
gyrating, dance-like motions, its sprightliness and
frolicsomeness? Unless I quote every part and
particle, I feel I cannot do justice to it. The
exquisite ease and grace, the subtle spirit that breathes
through this movement, defy description, and, more,
defy the attempts of most performers to reproduce
the original. He who ventures to interpret Chopin
ought to have a soul strung with chords which the gentlest
breath of feeling sets in vibration, and a body of
such a delicate and supple organisation as to echo
with equal readiness the music of the soul. As
to the listener, he is carried away in this movement
from one lovely picture to another, and no time is
left him to reflect and make objections with reference
to the whole.
The Concerto in E minor, Op. 11, dedicated to Mr.
Fred Kalkbrenner, shows more of volonte and less of
inspiration than the one in F minor. One can
almost read in it the words of the composer, “If
I have only the Allegro and the Adagio completely
finished, I shall be in no anxiety about the Finale.”
The elongated form of the first movement—the
introductory tutti alone extends to 138 bars—compares
disadvantageously with the greater compactness of
the corresponding movement in the F minor Concerto,
and makes still more sensible the monotony resulting
from the key-relation of the constituent parts, the
tonic being the same in both subjects. The scheme
is this:—First subject in E minor, second
subject in E major, working-out section in C major,
leading through various keys to the return of the first
subject in E minor and of the second subject in G major,
followed by a close in E minor. The tonic is
not relieved till the commencement of the working-out
section. The re-entrance of the second subject
brings, at last, something of a contrast. How
little Chopin understood the importance or the handling
of those powerful levers, key-relation and contrast,
may also be observed in the Sonata, Op. 4, where the
last movement brings the first subject in C minor
and the second in G minor. Here the composer
preserves the same mode (minor), there the same tonic,
the result being nearly the same in both instances.