Description
Scherzos, Variations
In December, 1830, Chopin spent the Christmas Eve in Vienna, for the first time away from home. It was probably during this special day, on the Christmas midnight mass in Viennese St. Stephen Cathedral, that the idea of Scherzo in B-minor, and its quotation from the most beautiful Polish carol Lulajże Jezuniu (Sleep my Child), originated. Due to its sound shape and expressiveness, the first Chopin’s scherzo is different from the composer’s previous work. Being the result of searching of new forms to express romantic essence, it is at the same time meaningful augury of new Chopin style. It is characteristic that its shape crystallised on the basis of scherzo, which is a part of Beethoven sonata cycle. Narrative freedom of Beethoven pattern, contrasts of rhythm, harmonics, and thematic material, elements of humour and peculiar playfulness, sarcasm and sneer, but also the tragic, were the inspiration for Chopin to create the new shape of the wholly individual composition and its subtle expressive design. In what shall gravity be adorned, if joke wears dark veils? commented Schuman upon Scherzo in B-minor. Each of Chopin scherzos has its own shade of expression and its own form variation. They are filled with the peculiar expression, though composed in the form of da capo, in which full of movement, restless first and last parts contrast with the middle part. The form is exemplified in the carol mentioned above (Scherzo in B-minor), group of themes with rhythms of Italian siciliana and waltz (Scherzo in B flat-minor), philosophical chorale in Waldesian Scherzo in C sharp-minor, as well as ecstatic and lyrical song in Scherzo in E-major. The three-part construction is only significant presence of the characteristics of this original form. Usage of rondo technique (especially in Scherzo in B-minor) significant presence of an element of transformation, sonata antithetical themes and their metamorphoses lead to the perception of each of the scherzos as the synthesis of full sanata cykle, with the middle part being the equivalent of adagio. This peculiar form of Chopin scherzo, being the climax in the history of this form, became the inspiration for numerous subsequent composers, such as Bruckner and Mahler.