The first movement of the B flat minor Sonata is for me something mighty - like a sculpture in rock. It can only be compared perhaps with the first movement of Beethovens Fifth Symphony. This section of Chopins work is-to my mind - on a par with the loftiest heights reached by such composers as Beethoven. (Lutoslawski)Chopins sonatas occupy an exceptional place in the history of nineteenth-century music; alongside the most magnificent works of Beethoven; Schubert; Liszt and Brahms. Chopin composed four sonatas; given below in the order they were written:Sonata in C minor; Op. 4 (composed 1827-1828; first published 1851)Sonata in B flat minor; Op. 35 (Funeral March 1837; whole work 1839; published 1840)Sonata in B minor; Op. 58 (1844; published 1845)Sonata in G minor for piano and cello; Op. 65 (1846-1847; published 1847)
#2584894 in eBooks 2014-10-22 2014-10-22File Name: B00M7SXMVM
Review
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful. If You want to read bass notation; buy this.By Geoffrey F. ArnoldIve been a musician all my life. And there is one rule to reading music:You must read music... every day... forever.Heres the deal. It literally is a "use it or lose it" proposition. Let me explain. While you never "forget" how to read; you do quickly get rusty at it if you do not exercise it all the time. Like a muscle; if you let it relax too long; it gets weak very fast. So it is with reading.This book starts you out simple and easy; walking you into the reading of notation one step at a time; introducing the elements of notation; rests; ties; etc.; as you go. The one thing you will have to do separately is learn the notes of the Bass clef; the lines and the spaces - and note values; along withy what ties; rests and triplets and such are - the only weak aspect of this book being the lack of a "Before You Begin" section to clarify this important foundation for reading music. But these are easily learned and committed to memory.The object is to read through each exercise only a couple times; and then move on. You DO NOT want to memorize anything - one of the great dangers of repeating a given exercise more than twice (and so you stop reading and start playing by rote memory). Move to the next exercise. As long as you understand what youre reading; thats more to the point than anything. But you keep moving forward after just a couple passes on each lesson.If you get bogged down with understanding the whole idea of reading music... then this caveat is important:I teach music; too. If you are struggling with learning to read; or want to learn to read; take this advice: book a couple lessons with a good teacher and have them teach you the basics of reading notation. Youll get the materials you need from them and then; if you dont want to continue lessons; you can strike out on your own and apply what they taught you in moving forward in your quest in learning to sight read music.Once you have gone through the book; simply return to around page 26 or so and begin again. The point is to read. And it is helpful if you can find notated bass parts to song so you can read actual composed music; not exercises. Build a library of songs; but refuse to memorize them.The point of reading music is reading the music notation is essential as part of your regular practice and playing routine - regardless of your instrument. Every day.12 of 12 people found the following review helpful. ExcellentBy Peter ArgondizzaReading contemporary bass rhythms provides both the student and teacher alike a comprehensive and methodical guide to modern bass playing. Because the book stresses reading and omits tablature; it will force and encourage the student to improve their reading: doing so by providing systematic exercises and musical examples that have real performance application in various styles. Having used this book successfully with several students; I recommend it as an essential component to bass guitar education.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. This is the best progressive reading music book Ive ever seenBy Brian CoveneyThis is the best progressive reading music book Ive ever seen; andIve seen them all. It starts simple and get more difficult. You dont move on until youve got what youre on down. A little at a time and youre reading anything you can get your hands on. Practice every day.