As previously stated, the work had already in September,
1828, been for some time at Vienna in the hands of
Haslinger; it was probably commenced as far back as
1827, but it did not appear in print till 1830. [Footnote:
It appeared in a serial publication entitled Odeon,
which was described on the title-page as: Ausgewahlte
grosse Concertstucke fur verschiedene Instrumente
(Selected Grand Concert-Pieces for different instruments).]
On April 10 of that year Chopin writes that he expects
it impatiently. The appearance of these Variations,
the first work of Chopin published outside his own
country, created a sensation. Of the impression
which he produced with it on the Viennese in 1829
enough has been said in the preceding chapter.
The Allgemeine musikalische Zeitung received no less
than three reviews of it, two of them—that
of Schumann and one by “an old musician”—were
accepted and inserted in the same number of the paper
(1831, Vol. xxxiii., No. 49); the third, by Friedrich
Wieck, which was rejected, found its way in the following
year into the musical journal Caecilia. Schumann’s
enthusiastic effusion was a prophecy rather than a
criticism. But although we may fail to distinguish
in Chopin’s composition the flirting of the
grandee Don Juan with the peasant-girl Zerlina, the
curses of the duped lover Masetto, and the jeers and
laughter of the knavish attendant Leporello, which
Schumann thought he recognised, we all obey most readily
and reverently his injunction, “Hats off, gentlemen:
a genius!” In these words lies, indeed, the
merit of Schumann’s review as a criticism.
Wieck felt and expressed nearly the same, only he
felt it less passionately and expressed it in the
customary critical style. The “old musician,”
on the other hand, is pedantically censorious, and
the redoubtable Rellstab (in the Iris) mercilessly
condemnatory. Still, these two conservative critics,
blinded as they were by the force of habit to the
excellences of the rising star, saw what their progressive
brethren overlooked in the ardour of their admiration—namely,
the super-abundance of ornament and figuration.
There is a grain of truth in the rather strong statement
of Rellstab that the composer “runs down the
theme with roulades, and throttles and hangs it with
chains of shakes.” What, however, Rellstab
and the “old musician”—for he,
too, exclaims, “nothing but bravura and figuration!”—did
not see, but what must be patent to every candid and
unprejudiced observer, are the originality, piquancy,
and grace of these fioriture, roulades, &c., which,
indeed, are unlike anything that was ever heard or
seen before Chopin’s time. I say “seen,”
for the configurations in the notation of this piece
are so different from those of the works of any other
composer that even an unmusical person could distinguish
them from all the rest; and there is none of the timid
groping, the awkward stumbling of the tyro. On
the contrary, the composer presents himself with an
ease and boldness which cannot but command admiration.