Chopin Nocturne 15.2 (remastered)

Published: Nov. 12, 2005, 10:15 a.m.

I had a request for \u201cMORE CHOPIN!\u201d which made me realize that I\u2019ve been neglecting the poor fellow \u2014 and he\u2019s such a favorite of mine! I\u2019ve been working on two new Chopin nocturnes, and I\u2019ll hopefully be ready to record them soon. In the meantime, however, here\u2019s one I\u2019ve played for a long time, in a freshly remastered recording.

\n

I like what I wrote about this piece when I posted this recording in its earlier, less acoustically pristine form, so I\u2019ll say it again: It\u2019s organic, and sounds almost improvised \u2014 except that it is impossibly perfect in every detail. Its soundscape is vast, deep, and richly pianistic, but look at the construction and you\u2019ll see the spare elegance of Bach. It has a loving tenderness, and a longing, that\u2019s unlike anything else, yet seems instantly familiar. And it\u2019s gorgeous.

\n
\nFr\xe9d\xe9ric Chopin\n
\nNocturne Op 15 No 2 (in F sharp major)\n
\nPaul Cantrell,\npiano\n
\n\u266b\nDownload\n(4:32 / 5.8 M)\n
\n\n

There\u2019s nothing quite like learning to play a piece of music to really get inside it. With this one, like many I\u2019ve shared here, I knew it was excellent music before I started learning it \u2014 but once I\u2019m inside it, once I\u2019m feeling through the piece with my own hands and working through its many parts with the microscope of learning, once I really start to \u201cget it\u201d about the music \u2026 it\u2019s just staggering how good it is. It just floors me. I don\u2019t know how much of that comes across in my playing \u2014 certainly I\u2019m only communicating a small shadow of that experience \u2014 but I hope you can share my sense of wonder that we have this music in our world.