Chopin ’s relationship with the waltz was complex and often ambivalent. Although the genre dominated the social music culture of his time, he approached it less as a dance form and more as a character piece . Of the eighteen waltzes he composed, he published only eight during his lifetime, and reportedly requested that the others be destroyed after his death — a gesture that suggests not only artistic selectivity, but also a certain reservation toward the genre’s public associations. Unlike the Viennese waltz, grounded in periodic regularity and clear dance function, Chopin’s waltzes preserve the triple meter while subtly reshaping it. The rhythmic pulse remains recognizable, yet it is frequently softened through rubato , expanded phrasing, and a harmonic language oriented toward introspection rather than symmetrical brilliance. The dance becomes an internal gesture rather than a social display. Waltz No. 9 in A-flat Major, Op. 69 No. 1 Published posthumously, this waltz exemplifies C...
A curated collection of writings on music, its creators, and the ideas behind it.