It was raining/storming all day today so what better than to play Chopin's Raindrop Prelude?! Anyways at 4:42/4:43 I hit a horrible wrong chord in the right hand just to give you a heads up lol. I was pretty much sight-reading the whole piece since I just decided this morning that because it was raining, i would record this today if I had time. Anyways..I love this piece (it's chopin DUH!) I don't think he could of given us an image of a thunderstorm through music any better. Just listen closely and imagine a springtime storm outside your window, you'll see :) How you ask did Chopin compose this piece?? well here's a little something I found about it..
There is one that came to him through an evening of dismal rain—it casts the soul into a terrible dejection. Maurice and I had left him in good health one morning to go shopping in Palma for things we needed at our "encampment." The rain came in overflowing torrents. We made three leagues in six hours, only to return in the middle of a flood. We got back in absolute dark, shoeless, having been abandoned by our driver to cross unheard of perils. We hurried, knowing how our sick one would worry. Indeed he had, but now was as though congealed in a kind of quiet desperation, and, weeping, he was playing his wonderful prelude.
Seeing us come in, he got up with a cry, then said with a bewildered air and a strange tone, "Ah, I was sure that you were dead." When he recovered his spirits and saw the state we were in, he was ill, picturing the dangers we had been through, but he confessed to me that while waiting for us he had seen it all in a dream, and no longer distinguishing the dream from reality, he became calm and drowsy.
While playing the piano, persuaded that he was dead himself, he saw himself drown in a lake. Heavy drops of icy water fell in a regular rhythm on his breast, and when I made him listen to the sound of the drops of water indeed falling in rhythm on the roof, he denied having heard it. He was even angry that I should interpret this in terms of imitative sounds. He protested with all his might—and he was right to—against the childishness of such aural imitations.
His genius was filled with the mysterious sounds of nature, but transformed into sublime equivalents in musical thought, and not through slavish imitation of the actual external sounds. His composition of that night was surely filled with raindrops, resounding clearly on the tiles of the Charterhouse, but it had been transformed in his imagination and in his song into tears falling upon his heart from the sky.
- George Sand on Chopin and this prelude
Such a beautiful peice. Well done.
rastaR00STER 7 months ago
ahh I remember this in Eternal sonata
jackolous 2 years ago
love this piece and really liked it when they used it in the Halo commercial.
IconMatthew1 3 years ago