Chopin's Mazurkas - Part 3 @ r7

This article is part 9 of 52 in the 2022 music project series.
This article is part 3 of 9 in the Reviewing Chopin's mazurkas series.
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And we're back with another exciting installment of me listening to Chopin's Mazurkas and then talking to myself about them (previously: part 1 and part 2). We begin on Op. 24, No. 1.

Quatre Mazurkas

For a monsieur Comte de Perthuis

Op. 24, No. 1 in G minor

I'm excited to announce that Chopin has returned to form by starting with a V - i progression. A return to the classics (see part 1 for more details).

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Op. 24, No. 1 starting on the V: apparently a mazurka classic

The main theme features some more "gypsy" style scales, with what I think is called the altered Phyrgian Hungarian minor scale, i.e. harmonic minor with a raised 4th. In this case some rogue C♯'s.

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Traces of the "gypsy minor" scale in Op. 24, No. 1

The next section features some interesting echoing by the left hand. The 9th jump followed by a descending chromatic which was repeated a phrase earlier in the right hand.

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Right hand descending chromatic line
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The same melody mirrored in the left hand in the next phrase

The rogue C♯ makes another appearance to help transition from E♭ back to G minor by use of what appears to be a progression of E♭7A7♭5D7 and finally ending back at Gm. That "V of the V" progression which utilizes the ♭5 is a harmony that is not uncommonly seen seen in Chopin's music, and the Romantic era in general (e.g. Chopin's 2nd Ballade)1. Ragtime music also makes very heavy use of the "V of the V" progression, although you don't see a ♭5 very frequently.

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"V of the V" in Op. 24, No. 1
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The "V of the V" progression in Chopin's Ballade No. 1
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"V of the V" as seen in Scott Joplin's famous The Entertainer

Op. 24, No. 2 in C major

A nice happy number, to contrast the gypsy-style funeral dirge of No. 1. The brief F major arpeggio in the B section reminded me of Chopin's F major Etude Op. 10, No. 8. It even has a similar trill. Although it's like three times faster and covers three times as many octaves.

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Arpeggios in Op. 24, No. 2
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Similar (identical) arpeggios in Chopin's Etude Op. 10, No. 8

This is followed by perhaps the clunkiest modulation I've heard from Chopin. You don't frequently see a modulation beginning with a tritone. Also notice that the VI progression is back on the menu as well!

The tritones continue as the left hand takes over the melody, this time in D♭ as opposed to A♭.

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A sudden and inevitable modulation to a tritone (and another VI progression!)
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More tritones as the left hand takes over the melody

And again my score is missing a note that's present in the recording I'm listening to. A rogue A is can be heard but not seen right before the repeated quarter note chords at the end. Time to investigate once again.

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The phantom A's missing from my score
  • Arthur Rubinstein does not play the phantom A's2
  • Martha Argerich does play the phantom A's3
  • Rafał Blechacz does play the phantom A's4
  • Krystian Zimerman does play the phantom A's5

In conclusion, play the A's. If Zimerman and Argerich are doing it, so should you.6

Op. 24, No. 3 in A♭ major

Another one starting off with the VI progression. I don't know why that fascinates me so much.

The A section is pretty simple, there's not a lot to say about it. It follows a simple chord progression (just I, IV and V) and nothing crazy happens. Barely even any passing tones or anything harmonically complex. It's just simple and easy to listen to.

The B section is a little more complex harmonies. I particularly liked the left hand, which plays continuously resolving °7 chords. The end of the B section reminds me of the beginning of Chopin's Ballade No. 2, but that's probably because I was just refamiliarized myself with it after trying to find the 7♭5 chord from the previous mazurka.

The little coda brings this happy little mazurka to a close. Although it ends on the third, which is almost ominous. Of note: the marking starting in the fifth bar from the end (perdendosi) is something I've literally never seen before. I had to look it up, and it means (essentially) "get slower and quieter".7 But you know, much more romantically.

Op. 24, No. 4 in B♭ minor


  1. Actually, this is incorrect, as I misremembered the chord voicings in Chopin's 2nd Ballade (there is a B7♭5 chord voicing at the very end, which eventually leads to E7 and then to Am, but there's like 8 measures of stuff in between the chords, so I don't think it counts). And then I couldn't actually find an example of it in less than 5 minutes so I gave up. It's possible that chord progression is not nearly as common as I thought in Romantic music.
  2. Rubenstein's performance of Op. 24, No. 2 on YouTube
  3. Argerich's performance of Op. 24, No. 2 on YouTube
  4. Blechacz's performance of Op. 24, No. 2 on YouTube
  5. Zimerman's performance of Op. 24, No. 2 on YouTube
  6. If possible, of course.
  7. From this source, perdendosi was also used by Chopin in his C minor Polonaise (Op. 40, No. 2), and by Beethoven in his 31st Sonata (A♭ major), which nobody remembers because it's sandwiched between the Hammerklavier and the famous and influential No. 32.