Classical Music | Piano Music

Frédéric Chopin

Barcarolle in F-sharp Major, Op. 60  Play

Isaac Mikhnovsky Piano

Recorded on 10/21/2009, uploaded on 10/21/2009

Musician's or Publisher's Notes

Recorded in 1938.  Transferred from a 78 rpm record.

Isaac Mikhnovsky (1914 - 1978) was a distinguished Soviet pianist and pedagogue.  His career started in the late 1930s and lasted for about 30 years.  Because of the Cold War, Western music aficionados are not very familiar with his work.  We are proud to present it here, even if just a snippet.  Read Mikhnovsky' biography here: http://www.classicalconnect.com/user/978

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Inspired by the folk songs sung by Venetian gondoliers, the barcarole carries with it the romantic imagery of the Venetian canals and of the city itself evoked by its rolling compound meter. Several composers of the 19th century, from Rossini to Fauré, composed barcaroles. Foremost among them, however, is a solitary specimen by Frédéric Chopin. Composed late in his life, during 1845-46, it is among his most popular compositions.

Three measures of dominant harmony open the piece followed by two more establishing the gentle rhythmic figure of the bass, as if rocking gently on the waves of the Venetian waterways. Over this flowing accompaniment sounds the piece’s entrancing cantabile melody. Within this melody, one can almost imagine the beautiful architecture of the city as it passes by or of two lovers floating peacefully down the river. Cast in the usual ternary form, in which Chopin showed superb mastery and imagination, the middle section, via a monophonic passage in the bass, shifts to the key of A major. This section becomes more harmonically adventurous, moving suddenly into the key of G-sharp major and F-sharp minor before returning the starting key again—all this, though, for the purpose of affecting a gradual increase in intensity from the episodes quiet beginning.  A quasi-rhapsodic section closes the central portion of the piece leading to an embellished reprise of the opening. From the close of the reprise, the coda launches forth in its own passionate melody. Venturing through distant harmonies, it eventually comes to rest quietly on a figure heard earlier in the piece. Sweeping scales then carry the listener onward to the end and bare dominant and tonic octaves conclude the barcarole.       Joseph DuBose


Russian Archival Recording