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A recording of prelude in d-flat major by chopin
A recording of prelude in d-flat major by chopin












a recording of prelude in d-flat major by chopin

I was confused when I read that the first and last sections of the prelude are in D-flat major, but that the middle section is in C-sharp minor. Rather than trying to figure out what the pedal “represents,” it makes more sense to me to understand the prelude as being about the idea of pedal point. I mean, if you could verbally convey the meaning of music, you wouldn’t need the music. Maybe so, but the likeliest explanation is that the pedal point just sounds good, and that it evokes too many different feelings and associations to be neatly expressible by language. Another theory is that Chopin was trying to symbolize the tolling of a bell to evoke death coming for us all. George Sand told a story about Chopin writing the piece on a rainy day, or in response to a rainy day, but that is probably not true. It’s a gentle pulse in the first and last sections, but it builds to a relentless pounding in the middle section. The most conspicuous feature of this prelude is the near-constant A-flat/G-sharp pedal point. Chopin’s actual title of this piece is “12 Préludes, Opus 28 Number 15 in D-Flat Major.” That’s not very memorable, though, so von Bülow’s name stuck.

a recording of prelude in d-flat major by chopin

The names were given later by a fan named Hans von Bülow.

a recording of prelude in d-flat major by chopin

Chopin didn’t title the piece “Raindrop,” nor did he give catchy nicknames to any of his other preludes.














A recording of prelude in d-flat major by chopin