Chopin Nocturne 15.3

Published: Oct. 9, 2004, 5:44 a.m.

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One of the most fundamental, most important principles in music is return: when things happen, they come back. Throughout a piece of music, there are recurring elements that unite the whole. The beginning and the end connect. If we depart from where we started, we return there \\u2014 or at least look back.

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The familiar verse / chorus / bridge form that underlies so many pop songs follows this principle: we might get a new melody, the bridge ("Why she had to leave, I don\\u2019t know"), but we still come back to the original repeating verse / chorus music ("Yesterday\\u2026"). Many, many classical pieces (especially Chopin nocturnes) follow ternary or \\u201cABA\\u201d form: thing 1, thing 2, thing 1 again. That includes many of the pieces I\\u2019ve posted in this blog. Even in a less clearly delineated structure, you\\u2019ll hear the principle of return: listen to Bach letting new material unfold continuously so that same initial idea keeps resurfacing in new forms, or Brahms letting several distinct ideas mingle and interact with one another.

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Return can be the operating principle even when it\\u2019s not immediately obvious: the three parts of Three Places are all built out of the same material, and the melody that was floating on top of a thick swirl of sound at the beginning comes back at the very end, transformed (the swirl is gone, and it\\u2019s bare now) but still present. The point is: look for return, and you\\u2019ll find it.

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Then we have today\\u2019s piece by Chopin. Everything in it happens twice \\u2026 and then never comes back. It\\u2019s like a series of matryoshka dolls that you cannot put back together once you\\u2019ve opened them. It moves through four distinct musical worlds, each more inward than the last, constantly curling in on itself and finally leaving us far from where we started, as if, having gone into whatever strange interior world this is, it is impossible to return to the place where we began, or even to imagine what that place was like.

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There is no reason this piece should work. It is, to my mind, a miracle. This is one I keep returning to, searching for its secret as a composer, and marveling at it as a human.

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\\nFr\\xe9d\\xe9ric Chopin\\n
\\nNocturne Op 15 No 3 (in G minor)\\n
\\nPaul Cantrell,\\npiano\\n
\\n\\u266b\\nDownload\\n(5:54 / 7.4 M)\\n
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