![]() ![]() A few years later he repeated his discovery at the Yale University, where he found two other unknown versions of the same Waltzes! It was unearthed in the 1950s, together with another previously unknown waltz in E flat major (no 18) by the American pianist Byron Janis, at Chateau Thoiry near Paris, France. The arpeggio in bar 21 offers a welcome moment of typical chopinesque embellishment, and the grace notes in this section can be performed more brilliantly than those in the outer sections.īackgroundThis Waltz was composed near the end of the Chopin’s life, perhaps even as late as 1849, the year he died. ![]() The middle section offers some, if subtle, contrast to the main mood. The atmosphere is best captured if the Allegretto marking is adhered to. Motifs and figurations move upward in a kind of hopeful manner, and although the key is A minor, the main theme ends in the relative key C major except at the last repeat. Sign up to listen & download > Chopin’s last waltz?Although this Waltz is unusually low-key and almost austere in its very simple harmonic and formal design, it is not exactly a gloomy piece.
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