How to Play Funeral March Piano Tutorial / Sheet Music by Frédéric Chopin! (Easy)
  • 6 years ago
Learn how to play Funeral March By Frederic Chopin on the piano!\r
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Its a song that many people are familiar with but may not even know it. The Funeral March by Frederic Chopin is often used to represent death in popular culture, especially in cartoons and video games. \r
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The Imperial March, played whenever the charer Darth Vader entered a room in the Star Wars trilogy, bears a strong resemblance to the Funeral March. \r
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Though its been somewhat satirized, the song remains a dark an beautiful piece that has been used at funerals, including the funeral for Chopin himself. \r
Frederic Chopin was a Polish composer and music teacher considered one of the great masters of Romantic music. He was born Feb. 22, 1810 according to baptismal records but he cited his birthday as March 1, 1810. A renowned child-prodigy pianist and composer, Chopin grew up in Warsaw and completed his musical education there. \r
Chopins works are technically demanding and emphasize nuance and expressive depth. He invented the musical form known as the instrumental ballade. He also made major innovations to the piano sonata, mazurka, waltz, nocturne, polonaise, etude, impromptu and prelude. \r
Chopins Funeral March was written mainly in 1837 though he composed the final portions of the sonata in 1839. It was the third movement in his Sonata No. 2 in B-flat Minor. The piece was played at the graveside during Chopins burial in 1849 at Pere Lachaise Cemetery in Paris and was used at the funeral of American president John F. Kennedy. \r
In 1933 the English composer Sir Edward Elgar transcribed it for full orchestra in D minor and it was performed for the very first time at Elgars memorial concert in 1934. \r
Chopins Funeral March is part of his Piano Sonata No. 2 in B-flat minor, Op. 35. The sonata consists of four movements and the Funeral March is the third movement, although it was written as early as 1837. \r
The rest of the sonatas movements were mainly written in 1839 at Nohant near Chateauroux in France. \r
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Gear:\r
Studio Projects C1 Large Diaphragm Condensor Microphones (2): \r
Creative Labs E-MU Preamp: \r
Monster Microphone Cables: \r
Senheiser HD 280 Pro Headphones: \r
Keyboard: I use a really old Roland keyboard that I dont think they even sell anymore. Ive heard good things about this keyboard: - I recommend trying out whatever keyboard you are thinking about in a store before buying.\r
Camera: I currently use a Kodak Zi8: - you might also try a later model if you are interested in this camera and price point. maybe something like the Kodak Playsport: \r
I edit my videos on an Asus U46E-BAL7 computer: using Adobe Premier Pro CS6: \r
I edit audio using Reaper:
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