Chopsticks (music)
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Chopsticks (original name The Celebrated Chop Waltz) is an extremely well-known, simple waltz for the piano. It is often one of the first that a new player of the instrument learns.
It was written in either 1877 or 1887, depending on the source, by Euphemia Allen under the pseudonym of Arthur de Lull (alternatively, Lulli). Allen, who was the sister of a music publisher, was supposedly only sixteen when she composed the piece, with arrangements for solo and duet. The title Chop Waltz comes from Allen's specification that the melody be played in two-part harmony with both hands held sideways, little fingers down, striking the keys with a chopping motion. This name suggests the piece should be played in 3/4 (waltz) metre, although it is also commonly heard with the stresses as in 6/8 time.
An equivalent of this rudimentary two-finger piano exercise was known in Russia in duple meter as "tati-tati" or the "Cutlet Polka." This version alternates the notes between the hands as follows:
rather than playing them at the same time in harmony. A group of Russian composers — specifically Alexander Borodin, César Cui, Nikolai Rimsky-Korsakov, and Anatoly Liadov, and Shcherbachov (with a modest addition by Franz Liszt) — composed four-hand piano music on this theme for Borodin's daughter Gania. (Modest Mussorgsky did not participate, thinking that the composition would be meaningless.) The original edition of this collection dates from 1879 under the title Paraphrases; over the next several years it was expanded to a set of 24 variations and 17 other pieces.
The film Big famously features the song being played on a giant foot-operated piano.
[edit] See also
- Der Flohwalzer (the Flea Waltz).
- Cho-Cho, a cartoon character with Chopsticks as her theme music