his nocturnes are often weaker than his first conceptions,
meaning the first portions of the nocturnes.
Now, although the middle parts in the present instances
are, on the contrary, slower movements, yet the judgment
holds good; at least, with respect to the first nocturne,
the middle part of which has nothing to recommend it
but the effective use of a full and sonorous instrumentation,
if I may use this word in speaking of one instrument.
The middle part of the second (f, D flat, Molto piu
lento), however, is much finer; in it we meet again,
as we did in some other nocturnes, with soothing,
simple chord progressions. When Gutmann studied
the C sharp minor nocturne with Chopin, the master
told him that the middle section (the Molto piu lento,
in D flat major) should be played as a recitative:
“A tyrant commands” (the first two chords),
he said, “and the other asks for mercy.”
Regarding the first nocturne (in F minor) of Op. 55,
we will note only the flebile dolcezza of the first
and the last section, and the inferiority of the more
impassioned middle section. The second nocturne
(in E flat major) differs in form from the other nocturnes
in this, that it has no contrasting second section,
the melody flowing onward from begining to end in
a uniform manner. The monotony of the unrelieved
sentimentality does not fail to make itself felt.
One is seized by an ever-increasing longing to get
out of this oppressive atmosphere, to feel the fresh
breezes and warm sunshine, to see smiling faces and
the many-coloured dress of Nature, to hear the rustling
of leaves, the murmuring of streams, and voices which
have not yet lost the clear, sonorous ring that joy
in the present and hope in the future impart.
The two nocturnes, Op. 62, seem to owe their existence
rather to the sweet habit of activity than to inspiration.
At any rate, the tender flutings, trills, roulades,
syncopations, &c., of the first nocturne (in B major),
and the sentimental declarations and confused, monotonous
agitation of the second (in E major), do not interest
me sufficiently to induce me to discuss their merits
and demerits.
One day Tausig, the great pianoforte-virtuoso, promised
W. von Lenz to play him Chopin’s “Barcarolle,”
Op. 60 (published in September, 1846), adding, “That
is a performance which must not be undertaken before
more than two persons. I shall play you my own
self (meinen Menschen). I love the piece, but
take it up only rarely.” Lenz, who did
not know the barcarolle, thereupon went to a music-shop
and read it through attentively. The piece, however,
did not please him at all; it seemed to him a long
movement in the nocturne-style, a Babel of figuration
on a lightly-laid foundation. But he found that
he had made a mistake, and, after hearing it played
by Tausig, confessed that the virtuoso had infused
into the “nine pages of enervating music, of
one and the same long-breathed rhythm (12/8), so much
interest, so much motion, and so much action,”
that he regretted the long piece was not longer.
And now let us hear what remarks Tausig made with
regard to the barcarolle:—