Originally posted by jean
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Late Baroque, Early Classical or…?
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post(...as I should have realized had I thought about "protagonist".)
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI wouldn't be much interested in hearing Bach "as his contemporaries did"
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Originally posted by jean View Post(That might have led you down another etymological wrong turning, though - people often analyse protagonist/antagonist as necessarily in opposition to each other, reading the first element as pro- rather than proto-.)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI do think though that one of the important aspects of HIPP, for me anyway, is that it brings listeners closer to being able to appreciate what was new in (for example) Bach's work, rather than looking at it down the long corridor of changing priorities in its performance history and thus seeing only what is old in it. Here of course the work of lesser-known artists like CPE Bach is at an advantage because it doesn't have such a long (if not unbroken) history of interpretation with each period in history claiming it as theirs.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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I'm sure Jean knows chapter and verse on this better than I do, but Greek tragedy first grew out of choral performances when one performer, the protagonist ("one who plays the first part, chief actor" according to Liddell & Scott), became a character standing out from the chorus, and a further development, attributed to Aeschylus, took place when a second actor, the antagonist, was introduced as an opponent to him.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Postthe protagonist ("one who plays the first part, chief actor" according to Liddell & Scott)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostHe had a point, certainly - but in this case whilst missing the point. I wouldn't be much interested in hearing Bach "as his contemporaries did" any more than I'd be interested in looking at Rembrandt as his did - I want to hear (with my early 21st Century ears and late 20th Century mind) the timbres and balances and speeds that Bach himself might have expected.
Also, the one voice to a part matter, whilst something for which there's ample historical evidence, cannot of itself take into account the forces that Bach might have liked to employ had it been possible to do so, any more than we can be sure what Bach's view of his work played on later instruments might have been. After all, some practitioners and devotees of the HIPP movement do not dismiss performances of WTC, the Goldbergs et al on modern Steinway Model Ds or Bösendorfer 290s. That said, we do have to thank HIPP for enlightening us as to earlier performance styles.
To go back to the issue of present-day music compared to the music of earlier eras, in agreeing what you say about richness and diversity, I do think that one unavoidable problem is the sheer availability of so very much music from all eras that might well confuse some listeners by reasons of sheer volume of material and lack of sufficient listening hours alone - but again, I'm not of course saying that this is a "bad thing!"Last edited by ahinton; 27-01-16, 17:30.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostI do think that one unavoidable problem is the sheer availability of so very much music from all ears that might well confuse some listeners by reasons of volume of material and lack of sufficient listening hours alone
Fascinating discussion, which could have the effect of completely changing my attitudes towards the musics of today - I'm still rather with ardcarp (being an old grumpy myself) in hearing what I hear as fragmentation as symptomatic of individualism and lack of any sort of cohering vision - something which did at least apply to the past, when there was general consensus around idiomatic consistencies, at least for those in positions of power, and departures therefrom were felt to be possible future pointers that stood out. Today we're all "in power" aren't we, through choice and instantaneous information.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostEras as opposed to earoles, as what some Bristolians would say, is what I think you mean! (Pace french frank!)
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostFascinating discussion, which could have the effect of completely changing my attitudes towards the musics of today - I'm still rather with ardcarp (being an old grumpy myself) in hearing what I hear as fragmentation as symptomatic of individualism and lack of any sort of cohering vision - something which did at least apply to the past, when there was general consensus around idiomatic consistencies, at least for those in positions of power, and departures therefrom were felt to be possible future pointers that stood out. Today we're all "in power" aren't we, through choice and instantaneous information.
What this also perhaps throws up is the extent to which composers and listeners should be expected to regard themselves as individuals first and foremost or whether a greater sense of "community", "belonging" or whatever should be expected to pertain as some might argue that it did to a degree in some earlier perceived "golden age"...
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI'm still rather with ardcarp (being an old grumpy myself) in hearing what I hear as fragmentation as symptomatic of individualism and lack of any sort of cohering vision - something which did at least apply to the past, when there was general consensus around idiomatic consistencies, at least for those in positions of power, and departures therefrom were felt to be possible future pointers that stood out. Today we're all "in power" aren't we, through choice and instantaneous information.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostAlso, the one voice to a part matter, whilst something for which there's ample historical evidence, cannot of itself take into account the forces that Bach might have liked to employ had it been possible to do so, any more than we can be sure what Bach's view of his work played on later instruments might have been. After all, some practitioners and devotees of the HIPP movement do not dismiss performances of WTC, the Goldbergs et al on modern Steinway Model Ds or Bösendorfer 290s. That said, we do have to thank HIPP for enlightening us as to earlier performance styles.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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