Frydery Franciszek Chopin (1810-1849), a great Polish musician, never left the piano throughout his life and was called the "piano poet". In 1837, he sternly refused the position of "chief pianist to His Majesty the Emperor of Russia" awarded to him by Tsarist Russia. Schumann called his music like "a cannon hidden among the flowers", announcing to the world: "Poland will not fall."
Chopin is good at improvising on the piano, and has a smooth and coherent composition. But when he writes down his improvisational thoughts, it is extremely laborious, and there are often many traces of alterations on the manuscript paper. Every time he performs it, a modified version will appear. “Let people guess! "Let the music speak for itself and not impose subjective assumptions on the audience - this is Chopin's belief. The high ideological value of Chopin's music is that it reflects one aspect of the general trend of the European bourgeois national movement in the 1930s and 1940s, shouting out It represents the angry and rebellious voice of the oppressed and enslaved Polish nation. Chopin's music has a strong Polish national style. He has a very serious attitude towards national folk music, and is opposed to seeking novelty, while not being bound by it, and always trying to appreciate it.
In this way, he not only improved the artistic level of the folk music genre, but also maintained its pure style and never lost its distinctive national folk characteristics. Have a deep understanding and mastery of the experience and results gained in creative methods, and use them as the starting point for their own creation, so that their music has a rigorous and complete art form that is deeply connected with the classical tradition.
In his musical works, every melody and every decorative sound is full of poetic fantasy. At the same time, only he can play Chopin's soft and delicate melodies and beautiful harmonies superbly and vividly. The work is so charming, but there is no sense of sensationalism. He sings each piece of music from a poetic perspective. Therefore, the Polish pianist Arthur Rubinstein called him a "pianist." "Poet"