1 The B minor has been criticised for being too much in the etude vein.
2 In the broadest sense of the word, every piece of music is an etude .
3 Aside from a few rallentando places, the etude is to be played strictly in time.
4 Miss Flora Cantwell launched into an etude .
5 The first prelude, which, like the first etude , begins in C, has all the characteristics of an impromptu.
6 Chopin needs no such clangorous padding in this etude , which gains by legitimate strokes the most startling contrasts.
7 Its agitated, whirring, unharmonized triplets are strangely disquieting, and can never be mistaken for mere etude passage work.
8 It is easy to lose the way, to focus on one thing when the etude is about something else.
9 Compare with this etude the introduction to the Capriccio in B minor, with orchestra, by Felix Mendelssohn, first page.
10 Pianists usually take the first part too fast, the second too slowly, transforming this poetic composition into an etude .
11 Von Bulow writes cannily enough, that the second study in A minor being chromatically related to Moscheles' etude , op.
12 Riemann has his own ideas of the phrasing of the following one, the fifth and familiar "Black Key" etude .
13 This etude is an exceedingly piquant composition, possessing for the hearer a wondrous, fantastic charm, if played with the proper insight.
14 Keys and strings and vibrations of the air are but stimuli for the auditory experience which is the real nocturne or etude .
15 What, indeed, despite the algebraic character of the tone-language, may not a lively fancy conjure out of, or, rather, into, this etude !
16 This news, it is said, was the genesis of the great C minor etude in opus 10, sometimes called the "Revolutionary."
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