Etude No. 1 from Etudes, Op. 10
Maurizio Pollini, piano
Étude Op. 10, No.1 in C major, composed by Frédéric Chopin, is a technical study in reach and arpeggios for the piano. It also focuses on stretching the fingers. It was composed in 1829, and first published in 1833, in France, Germany, and England. In a prefatory note to the 1916 Schirmer edition the American music critic James Huneker (18571921) compared the “hypnotic charm“ that these “dizzy acclivities and descents exercise for eye as well as ear“ to the frightening staircases in Giovanni Battista Piranesi’s prints of the Carceri d’invenzione. The work is executed at an Allegro tempo. The time-signature Common time is according to the first French, English, and German editions. Chopin’s own manuscript reads Cut time. The right hand gauntlet consists entirely of broad arpeggios in semiquavers (sixteenth notes) on modulating scales. The left hand plays the deep melody in slow, droning octa