Burgmuller - Op. 100 No. 9 - The Chase

Romantic

Difficulty Level: 5

(8,500 Points)

Description:

“Burgmuller - Op. 100 No. 9 - The Chase” is classified as a Level 5 Piano work worth 8,500 points within the Road to Virtuosity progression system. It is categorized under Composers → Burgmuller, Friedrich and is part of the Romantic collection. The sheet music for “Burgmuller - Op. 100 No. 9 - The Chase” provided on this website has the following copyright status: Non-Commercial.

“Burgmüller - Op. 100, No. 9 - The Chase” is a fast Romantic character study with an energetic Allegro vivace marking and a clear 6/8 drive. The music is built around repeated chase-like rhythmic figures, sharp accents, quick dynamic changes, and a contrasting middle section marked dolente. The title fits the piece well because the opening and return sections move with a constant forward push, while the middle briefly changes into a more expressive, minor-colored passage.

Measures 1–30 present the main chase material. The left hand begins with repeated chord attacks and a crescendo before the right hand enters with the quick repeated figure that defines the piece. This section uses strong dynamic contrasts, accents, and short slurred gestures, creating a restless running character that returns several times.

Measures 31–37 create the contrasting dolente middle section. The melody becomes smoother and more expressive, while the left hand supports with a steady broken accompaniment pattern. This section is softer and more lyrical than the opening, giving the piece a brief emotional contrast before the chase rhythm returns.

Measures 38–46 bring back the main opening material. The repeated right-hand figures and left-hand chord support return, along with the same sharp accents and quick dynamic shifts. This return restores the fast, agitated character after the more expressive middle section.

Measures 47–57 form the final drive and ending. The left hand returns to repeated chord attacks with crescendos, while the right hand keeps the chase figure moving above it. The final measures pull back through mf, p, and pp, then slow with rall. before the last held chord.

Interesting fact: “The Chase” is one of the most descriptive titles in Burgmüller’s Op. 100. The music does not just suggest a chase through speed alone; it uses repeated rhythmic pursuit figures, sudden accents, and quick dynamic changes to make the piece feel like something is constantly moving, escaping, and returning.

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