As something of an aside, Mark Bebbington usually has the dots on the music stand when he gives a recital. Nothing wrong with that at all, but not common with performing solo pianists.
Performing from memory
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostAs something of an aside, Mark Bebbington usually has the dots on the music stand when he gives a recital. Nothing wrong with that at all, but not common with performing solo pianists.
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Pianists who are accompanying or taking part in an ensemble invariably do. But it is very unusual for a top-rate solo pianist to use music on the concert platform. It is certainly not the way music colleges prepare students...and have you really seen the dots on a music stand for a concerto? It never fails to amaze me how many millions of 'bits' of information reside in the brain of soloists. The facility is often referred to as 'muscular memory' but under the intense pressure of a live concert performance, I think they have to rely on more than just the fingers doing it on their own because of countless repetitions and hours of practice.
You must surely be aware of this from watching BBC Young Musician or Proms piano recitals? It applies to most other instrumentalists too....but strangely, it is a rarer occurrence for organ recitalists.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostPianists who are accompanying or taking part in an ensemble invariably do. But it is very unusual for a top-rate solo pianist to use music on the concert platform. It is certainly not the way music colleges prepare students...and have you really seen the dots on a music stand for a concerto? It never fails to amaze me how many millions of 'bits' of information reside in the brain of soloists. The facility is often referred to as 'muscular memory' but under the intense pressure of a live concert performance, I think they have to rely on more than just the fingers doing it on their own because of countless repetitions and hours of practice.
Second thing: just because a performer has the score in front of them - which I've seen many concert pianists and solo instrumentalists do over the years - doesn't mean that they "know it" any less well than colleagues who've dispensed with the printed dots on the platform. In my experience, it's a matter of personal choice, not a sign of laziness (not that you are suggesting that's the case, I know) or inferior preparation.
Last time I saw a pianist playing this Poulenc concerto live, they were using a score. And the performance was none the worse for it.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostPianists who are accompanying or taking part in an ensemble invariably do. But it is very unusual for a top-rate solo pianist to use music on the concert platform.
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Originally posted by Master Jacques View PostI'm not sure about any of this. Two things: learning a piece of music is really no different to an actor learning a part in a play, its about the intellect and memory through repetition, with "muscle memory" not playing much of a part (if such a thing really exists, somehow quasi-independent of the brain, which I'd question).
Second thing: just because a performer has the score in front of them - which I've seen many concert pianists and solo instrumentalists do over the years - doesn't mean that they "know it" any less well than colleagues who've dispensed with the printed dots on the platform. In my experience, it's a matter of personal choice, not a sign of laziness (not that you are suggesting that's the case, I know) or inferior preparation.
Last time I saw a pianist playing this Poulenc concerto live, they were using a score. And the performance was none the worse for it.
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Originally posted by Goon525 View PostI do recall seeing Clifford Curzon give Mozart concerto performances with score and page turner as part of the act. (He was rather good, by the way.)
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Memorising of music is a very mixed convention. One of the techniques used is hours of memorising the dots on the page away from the instrument, before actually learning to play it.
For singers, they appear just to follow conventions. Clearly, opera singers can’t appear on stage clutching a score, but elsewhere, it shouldn’t be a problem.
When I did Grade 8 Singing at the grand old age of 58, I had to sing everything from memory, apart from solos from oratorios (as “that’s the way it’s done”.
Some choirs sing without music, though these tend to the one whose members mostly can’t read music. Occasionally mainstream choirs are asked to sing the odd item from memory, but the result can be messy.
The Aurora Orchestra makes a big thing about playing from memory (and the BBC presenters hype it up even more) but I would prefer to be impressed by their standard of performance, rather than getting excited about their ability to remember every note. The only real advantage of orchestras playing from memory is that half of each string section doesn’t drop out every time there’s a page turn.
Returning to choirs singing from memory, there was a Mahler symphony TV broadcast at last year’s Proms. Most of the choir sang without music but seemed rather diffident, so the experiment wasn’t much of a success. Those who’d sneaked a score in seem far more confident.
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I'm sorry to go om about this, but in the vast majority of recitals by top-rate solo pianists, the 'score' is not on the music desk. Furthermore it is usual for the music desk to be removed from the Model D , or in this case from Angela Hewitt's Fazioli:
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostI'm sorry to go om about this, but in the vast majority of recitals by top-rate solo pianists, the 'score' is not on the music desk. Furthermore it is usual for the music desk to be removed from the Model D , or in this case from Angela Hewitt's Fazioli:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MRB5_Gt98P4
Actually now I think about it, there is a relevance here to the Poulenc. One of the features Tacchino brings out so well, in his recording, is the debunking of the idea of Bach as some sort of Holy Writ - by setting it out alongside street music (and a lot of other things) Poulenc lets us know that it's just music after all, and all the more joyous for that.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostAs something of an aside, Mark Bebbington usually has the dots on the music stand when he gives a recital. Nothing wrong with that at all, but not common with performing solo pianists.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostMemorising of music is a very mixed convention. One of the techniques used is hours of memorising the dots on the page away from the instrument, before actually learning to play it.
For singers, they appear just to follow conventions. Clearly, opera singers can’t appear on stage clutching a score, but elsewhere, it shouldn’t be a problem.
When I did Grade 8 Singing at the grand old age of 58, I had to sing everything from memory, apart from solos from oratorios (as “that’s the way it’s done”.
Some choirs sing without music, though these tend to the one whose members mostly can’t read music. Occasionally mainstream choirs are asked to sing the odd item from memory, but the result can be messy.
The Aurora Orchestra makes a big thing about playing from memory (and the BBC presenters hype it up even more) but I would prefer to be impressed by their standard of performance, rather than getting excited about their ability to remember every note. The only real advantage of orchestras playing from memory is that half of each string section doesn’t drop out every time there’s a page turn.
Returning to choirs singing from memory, there was a Mahler symphony TV broadcast at last year’s Proms. Most of the choir sang without music but seemed rather diffident, so the experiment wasn’t much of a success. Those who’d sneaked a score in seem far more confident.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostQuite. I have attended many performances of concertante works for piano and orchestra where the pianist made use of a score (with or without an attendant page-turner) including some at the Proms.
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Originally posted by Ein Heldenleben View PostI don’t think I’ve ever seen a major pianist play with a score live.
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