by brother initiate Richard Stewart, Los Angeles, California, USA (originally
in English)
World-renowned
nineteenth-century composer Frederic Chopin (1810-1849) is one of the
most original creative spirits in musical history. His compositional
style shows little influence from the work of other composers, and in
fact, many of his pieces, such as the polonaises and ballades, define
new genres all their own. As one modern critic writes, “In the
structure and form of his compositions, he is quite alone; his sense
of balance and architecture seemed to spring from some unknown well-source.”
Thus Chopin’s inspiration appears to have come directly from enlightened
contacts with Heaven, the “unknown well-source,” and not
from the examples of his predecessors or peers. This view is affirmed
by his friend, the Hungarian composer Franz Liszt:
So
works this music upon Earth;
God so admits it, sends it forth
To add another worth to worth.
A new creation-bloom
that rounds
The old creation, and expounds
His Beautiful in tuneful sounds.
~~ Excerpt from the Preface to Liszt’s
Life of Chopin
Chopin was born in Warsaw into
the affluent home of a French father and a Polish mother of noble lineage.
From early childhood, he loved piano music and began taking piano lessons
at the age of six. He started to compose even before he knew how to
write down his inspirations, and his musical talent soon became obvious,
being compared with the childhood genius of Mozart. His first published
piece appeared when he was fifteen, and by the time he was seventeen,
Chopin was recognized as the leading pianist of Warsaw and a gifted
composer.
Due to political upheavals in
Poland, however, at age twenty he moved to Paris, the center of the
Romantic Movement in the arts, and except for occasional trips abroad,
spent the rest of his life in France. Being introverted by nature, Chopin
avoided giving public concerts, but instead played for groups of friends
and made a living from piano teaching and the sale of his works.
“If this beautiful
but elusive quality is not of humankind, but of God, then this is Chopin’s
highest gift to us. In summary, Chopin got as close as any composer
to expressing the nature of the inner worlds of sound and experience.”
~~
by a modern critic
Chopin wrote almost exclusively
for the piano, making the instrument “sing” in a way that
no previous composer had conceived, and so earned the epithet “Poet
of the Piano.” His sense of lyricism and melodic genius gave rise
to some of the most beautiful music ever written, and his piano works
are the most frequently played in history. He is one of the few universal
masters, and his popularity has never waned. Nearly everything he wrote
is in the permanent repertoire and his compositions are known around
the globe. The great twentieth-century American pianist Arthur Rubinstein
confirmed, “When the first notes of Chopin sound through the concert
hall, there is a happy sign of recognition. All over the world men and
women know his music. They love it; they are moved by it. It is uniquely
expressive and personal art.” Besides being heard regularly in
concerts and recordings, Chopin’s works are used for the famous
ballet Les Sylphides, and are heard in countless films such as
The Pianist, Shine and The Truman Show.
Chopin’s widespread appeal
no doubt lies in his ability to evoke memories of the celestial music,
the sounds of the inner worlds that were his source of creative inspiration.
This capacity is like that of his great role model Johann Sebastian
Bach, who believed that his works were not of his own making but arose
from and glorified God. Such true musical geniuses transcend the desire
to simply describe the human experience through music and ultimately
approach God Hirmself. As another critic states, “If this beautiful
but elusive quality is not of humankind, but of God, then this is Chopin’s
highest gift to us. In summary, Chopin got as close as any composer
to expressing the nature of the inner worlds of sound and experience.”
Thus, Chopin’s sensitive,
mystical nature and attunement to the Heavenly sounds are the keys to
his limitless gifts as a composer and performer. The nineteenth-century
pianist Anton Rubinstein called him, “the Piano Bard, the Piano
Rhapsodist, the Piano Mind and the Piano Soul” and added, “Whether
the spirit of the instrument breathed upon him I do not know, but all
possible expressions are found in his compositions, and all are sung
by him upon this instrument.”
Chopin’s wide range of expression
is shown, for example, in his Op. 34, No. 2 Valse Brillante,
which addresses the human spirit in an intimate way reflecting the beauty
of the higher music — the “Heavenly Melodious Teaching,”
to use Supreme Master Ching Hai’s term. In fact, many pianists
and scholars have described Chopin’s waltzes as “dances
for the soul” expressing profound spiritual reflection —
musical love poems to God and humanity that reveal the composer’s
elevated moods, moments of inner longing and strong humanistic feelings.
Le Ménestral (‘The Minstrel’), a journal of
Chopin’s time, wrote: “[He is] the sylph of the piano, attached
to this mortal world by the merest touch of a finger and nourished by
dreams from on high. Listen to Chopin play! It is like the sighing of
a flower, the whisper of clouds or the murmur of the stars.”
It was also his ready familiarity
with the higher realms that allowed Chopin to compose naturally and
spontaneously, as his companion, the novelist Aurore Dudevant (who wrote
under the pen name George Sand), eloquently remarks: “His creation
was spontaneous, miraculous. He found it without searching for it, without
foreseeing it. It came to his piano suddenly, complete, sublime, or
it sang in his head during a walk, and he would hasten to hear it again
by tossing it off on his instrument.” This comment brings to mind
Supreme Master Ching Hai’s description of how She creates Her
art works quickly and naturally from inner revelations: “My inspirations
come from inside my brain! Sometimes the colors and pictures come before
I can paint them. So I have to do it fast before I forget. Sometimes
I’m very inspired. In one day I can make ten or twenty designs
or in one night perhaps thirty clothing designs.”
Chopin also possessed the humility,
detachment and simplicity of an enlightened being. For example, when
the great German composer Robert Schumann responded to Chopin’s
early work, the Opus 2 Variations for Piano, with the now-famous
remark, “Hats off, gentlemen, a genius!” Chopin reacted
modestly, disliking the public excitement that soon propelled him to
international fame. Also, these excerpts from his letters attest to
the composers’ detached attitude and uncomplicated nature: “I’m
a revolutionary; money means nothing to me” and “Simplicity
is the highest goal, achievable when you have overcome all difficulties.”
As Supreme Master Ching Hai teaches, “We must become like children
to return to the Heavenly Kingdom. We should not be too complicated.
We must not mind too much about everything. Even when we grow up, we
should still preserve a heart like a child’s.” Through observation
of his life and writings, it appears that Chopin clearly lived up to
this ideal.
According to a witness, the
priest Abbé Jelowicki, as Chopin neared his untimely death at
age thirty-nine from tuberculosis, he seemed truly happy, and told others
of his contentment. At this moment he expressed only ecstatic joy, love
of God, detachment from the world, and a wish for a speedy departure
from the physical body. He called on the names of Jesus, Mary and Joseph,
kissed the crucifix he was holding and pressed it to his heart, crying,
“Now I am at the source of Blessedness” as if to say that
he was aware of entering the region of Heavenly Light. As Supreme Master
Ching Hai says, when we are enlightened, we “transcend the limits
of death and live forever. Once the fear of death is transcended, is
understood by our own very weak and scared soul, we are forever eternal.”
Perhaps at this point Chopin had truly reached the state he wrote of
in his letters: “Simplicity is the highest goal, achievable when
you have overcome all difficulties.”
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