Players.bio is a large online platform sharing the best live coverage of your favourite sports: Football, Golf, Rugby, Cricket, F1, Boxing, NFL, NBA, plus the latest sports news, transfers & scores. Exclusive interviews, fresh photos and videos, breaking news. Stay tuned to know everything you wish about your favorite stars 24/7. Check our daily updates and make sure you don't miss anything about celebrities' lives.

Contacts

  • players.bio

Chopin: Thousands of pages of his life and work available with a click

Composer and pianist, Frédéric Chopin died in Paris in 1849 at the age of thirty-nine from a lung condition. The son of a French father and a Polish mother, he began playing the piano at the age of four. At twenty-one he moved to France, although echoes of the folklore of his beloved Poland remained evident in his prolific work. The Frédéric Chopin Institute in Warsaw has brought it together on a free platform that is accessible to everyone with just one click. 

Jacek Iwaszko, coordinator of the Chopin Heritage Open Access Project, explains that they decided to “publish materials that had never been published online or were very unique.” 

Although access is open to all, Chopin specialists, musicians and researchers are the ones who benefit most from the platform. Young and award-winning performer Justyna Żołnacz uses it to compare and learn.

The digitalisation of the Chopin universe mobilised around twenty people for more than two years. Scanners of different types were used, depending on the characteristics of each object. 

One of the biggest challenges, Iwaszko says, was “converting all the metadata into a single format, to make it easier to search” on the platform. It also aims to preserve Chopin's legacy forever: “We thought of digitisation as part of the preservation of materials because we know that a lot of Polish music was destroyed during World War II,” adds Jacek Iwaszko. 

However, the archives of the Chopin Institute in Warsaw still hold many secrets to be revealed. Many of the digitised works come from the Frederic Chopin Museum in Warsaw, which houses nearly ninety thousand objects that belonged to the composer; but many others have not yet been digitised. Thousands of books dedicated to the composer are stored

Read more on euronews.com
DMCA