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ballade
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ballade

In literature, a poetic form developed in France in the later Middle Ages from the ballad, generally consisting of one or more groups of three stanzas of seven or eight lines each, followed by a shorter stanza or envoy, the last line being repeated as a chorus. In music, a ballade is an instrumental piece based on a story; a form used in piano works by Chopin and Liszt.



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He includes straightforward ballades with only an occasional triplet, as well as relentless ostinati (a la "Linus and Lucy"), shifting Latin rhythms, hemiolic passages and some more challenging keys (b-flat minor, D-flat major).
1400-1460), and was originally a setting of one of the Cent ballades of Christine de Pizan.
2, 4 and 5,'' Murray Perahia, piano; ``Chopin: The Four Ballades,'' Evgeny Kissin, piano; ``Confrey: Piano Music'' Eteri Andjaparidze, piano; ``Rzewski: The People United Will Never Be Defeated, etc.
 
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