Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte
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A Messiah to send Hippites rushing for the smelling salts ?
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Originally posted by ahinton View Post... what other factors might you see as accounting in some way for those changes in 19th century piano design and manufacture ?
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... my impression after reading Rosamond Harding's book was that there was enormous competition between the rival makers, adding extra bells and whistles (sometimes literally) in order to attract custom. I think an analogy might be with car makers over the last century : the manufacturers keep adding things in the hope of making their wares more likely to sell.
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Postthe manufacturers keep adding things in the hope of making their wares more likely to sell.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostWell, there is that factor, of course, but one might still wonder why so much of it happened at that point in the mid-19th century rather than earlier and, for that matter, why comparatively little of it's happened since whereas it's never really stopped in car manufacture.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIndeed. Even "great composers" and their priorities are fairly insignificant next to increased profits. The idea that instrument makers were (or are) selfless devotees of compositorial preferences is quaint to say the least.
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostMy history is vague to put it mildly but wasn’t it around this time when what is now know as the Middle Class started to establish? As far as I remember, those were the people who were very keen on Investing in Culture, and public concerts were a very good place to establish their social distinction. And a new marker made for piano manufacturers. Or something to that effect.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostOK, but to what extent might you ascribe the rise of that so-called class to the composers whom I mentioned and, as a corollary thereto, assert that this is why they began to write as they did, perhaps to encourage instrument designers and manufacturers to start to up the ante in internecine capitalist competition? Somehow, I cannot quite see Liszt's Sonata, studies and Hungarian Rhapsodies, Alkan's studies and Chopin's Scherzi and Ballades as an essential constituent of such a cynical and deliberate ploy...
Perhaps with an exception of Hildegard of Bingen, most composers in history (more so in modern time I guess) composed for their livelihood. They couldn’t have been completely unconcerned with or indifferent to the social trend.
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostAgain, this is a complete guess, so do ignore it if you think it nonsense.
Perhaps with an exception of Hildegard of Bingen, most composers in history (more so in modern time I guess) composed for their livelihood. They couldn’t have been completely unconcerned with or indifferent to the social trend.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Post
I can't speak for Tchaikovsky, but everyone makes mistakes sometimes - when I was working as a copyist for Peter Maxwell Davies I had to call him up and ask what to do about a low B flat in the violas...
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostYou can retune a viola, but not a flute (not my that much).
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostMy history is vague to put it mildly but wasn’t it around this time when what is now know as the Middle Class started to establish?
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Are there not four significant factors in the developments of instruments and music?
These are:
Composers
Instruments and instrument makers
Performers who play on instruments
Audience/listeners
It is the interrelationships between these which drive change and "industry".
If a change in technology or fashion alters the balance between the factors, then this may initiate "progress".
For example, Mozart is known to have preferred the keyboard instruments made by some makers to others.
Perhaps there was even some form of dialogue between instrument makers and composers, or maybe between instrument makers and performers. This in turn could have to changes, maybe some small but others perhaps more significant.
In Bach's time harpsichords were still one of the predominant keyboards instruments, but they would have been quite difficult to make, requiring a lot of craftmanship and technical expertise. Also, tuning and other factors are problematic. As the fortepiano and piano developed, some advantages of the new types of instrument would have been noted, though initially production methods would still have relied on craft workers.
Each of the actors in the whole music/musical instrument business would probably be trying to gain some form of advantage, which might have become more significant in a competitive market. A violinist who used "brand A" violins might discover that those violins were in some ways more reliable, so he (probably was a he ...) so would tend to prefer thos violins as they would give him fewer problems, and he might be more consistently employed. On the other hand, another violinist might discover that "brand B" violins had a smoother tone, while yet another violin might have a louder tone. These factors would affect the way performers adopted instruments, including their interactions with their audiences, and that could affect their reputation and employability.
Gradually also forms of branding and promotion would emerge. "VIrtuoso X plays on brand Y instruments ...."
More efficient mass production techniques which emerged and were developed over the last two centuries would also have had some impact.
Mention has been made of pianos and the apparent rise of the middle classes. Such techniques sould enable many more people to use instruments than would have been able to previously.In the nineteenth century this could have encouraged amateur musicians, and this would have continued through to the twentieth century, but then the development of devices and systems for providing music "on demand" very likely reduced the proportion of people who wanted to learn instruments. Initially devices such as player pianos could satisfy demand, then radios and gramophones etc., so many people nowadays do not play any instrument, though whether this is significant as a proportion of the total population I don't know. Probably in earlier times there weren't too many performers either, as most people were too busy trying to survive in other ways, and music wasn't such an essential part of their lives.
However, by the end of the 20th and beginning of the 21st century, we have probably seen the effects of saturated markets and fashion in different ways.
Worldwide we are seeing production systems which are capable of giving everyone on the planet (and there are more of them than a century or two ago) some devices at low costs, to the extent that the makers who are perhaps significantly profit driven, will notice drops in profitability, and will "require" new or variant products to make in order to continue. Fashion has probably always played a part in the commercial side of things, but now it is very significant. Think iPhones and other similar items.
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