The Valzer Op. 69 n. 1, also known as the apocryphal title of Valzer Dell'Addio, is a musical composition for piano written by Fryderyk Chopin in 1835. According to Wodzinski's fantasies in the book Le Trois Romans De Frédéric Chopin, the piece was inspired by composer Maria Wodzińska the moment he was about to leave the musician after a vacation spent together. At the dozen of the ten, with the diligence already ready at the door, the young man gave him the gift of a rose. And the composer, in the lyrical struggle, improvised the song at the piano, which later baptized as Waltz of the Addition. Beyond the anecdote, the waltz certainly preserves a vague and loving aura. The formal plant has a bitematic main waltz with the inclusion of a second smaller welder (trio) inside it, as in the previous century it was for a similar structure: that of the minuet. The first theme of the main waltz has a cantabile course, at times almost dreamy. The second theme, on the other hand, contrasts with greater vivacity and the most serene character. The waltz concludes with the resumption of the first theme. A bizarre phrase, which returns several times over herself, opens the trio. There is a constant alternation between a second rising and ascending idea. The resumption of the first theme of the main waltz acts as a conclusion.
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