I want to sound off about repeats (in musical performances, that is, not on TV).
This has annoyed me for years. We are all taught that the dots at the beginning and end of a passage mean that the section between is to be played again – and that something similar happens with D.S. or D.C. Quite simple. Yet as soon as we start playing in earnest, there’s almost an assumption that any repeat is optional, almost because the repeat sign is there. Conductors quickly become used to having to sort out repeats in advance, rather than assuming people will simply play them because they’re there. I have had serious ‘discussions’ (we never had arguments of course) about why I should have the gall to insist on a repeat.
I know that it’s sometimes necessary to omit repeats for timing’s sake, or the need to fit in with the whole programme (this is often the justification for doing so with the Strauss family); and again, composers did often wrote ‘automatic’ repeats simply because it was the style. But what permission does even this give us to ignore them without serious thought beforehand?
And then there are symphonic repeats. The absence of an exposition repeat noticeably affects the balance between the movement and the whole work – generally a bad thing, surely. I think Dvorak’s New World can easily suffer in this respect – the first movement is quite short without its repeat. Also, you sometimes lose long passages of music that appear nowhere else if you omit the repeat (Mendelssohn’s Italian is often quoted – the ‘lost’ bridge passage is some 40 bars!).
But my main objection is that, by leaving out repeats, we are not presenting the music as the composer wrote it.
I hope I am not being too dogmatic; there are good reasons for leaving out some repeats. The exposition repeat in the last movement of Beethoven 5 is an example. When the movement starts, it comes as a blaze of C major after that long bridge passage from the scherzo; you just can’t do that on the repeat, so it seems (to me) weaker. Also, of course, Beethoven introduces trombones into a symphony for the first time with that ‘blaze’ – something that loses its edge on the repeat. This is my opinion, and others will differ, but at least it comes from serious thought about the music and not from a blind assumption that the repeat is optional.
I’ll put away my bonnet now, though I suspect the bee will stay in it.
This has annoyed me for years. We are all taught that the dots at the beginning and end of a passage mean that the section between is to be played again – and that something similar happens with D.S. or D.C. Quite simple. Yet as soon as we start playing in earnest, there’s almost an assumption that any repeat is optional, almost because the repeat sign is there. Conductors quickly become used to having to sort out repeats in advance, rather than assuming people will simply play them because they’re there. I have had serious ‘discussions’ (we never had arguments of course) about why I should have the gall to insist on a repeat.
I know that it’s sometimes necessary to omit repeats for timing’s sake, or the need to fit in with the whole programme (this is often the justification for doing so with the Strauss family); and again, composers did often wrote ‘automatic’ repeats simply because it was the style. But what permission does even this give us to ignore them without serious thought beforehand?
And then there are symphonic repeats. The absence of an exposition repeat noticeably affects the balance between the movement and the whole work – generally a bad thing, surely. I think Dvorak’s New World can easily suffer in this respect – the first movement is quite short without its repeat. Also, you sometimes lose long passages of music that appear nowhere else if you omit the repeat (Mendelssohn’s Italian is often quoted – the ‘lost’ bridge passage is some 40 bars!).
But my main objection is that, by leaving out repeats, we are not presenting the music as the composer wrote it.
I hope I am not being too dogmatic; there are good reasons for leaving out some repeats. The exposition repeat in the last movement of Beethoven 5 is an example. When the movement starts, it comes as a blaze of C major after that long bridge passage from the scherzo; you just can’t do that on the repeat, so it seems (to me) weaker. Also, of course, Beethoven introduces trombones into a symphony for the first time with that ‘blaze’ – something that loses its edge on the repeat. This is my opinion, and others will differ, but at least it comes from serious thought about the music and not from a blind assumption that the repeat is optional.
I’ll put away my bonnet now, though I suspect the bee will stay in it.
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