Much earlier in this thread, I mentioned having a CD in which the booklet contained a conversation between Brendel and Staier. After much searching in my collection, I find that they weren't discussing Schubert at all but two Mozart piano concertos. Sorry, blame it on my memory and my far too large collection.
BaL 16.12.17 - Schubert: Piano Sonata no. 21 in B flat D960
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Originally posted by silvestrione View PostPlease don't put words into my mouth: I LOVE Schubert's late works, but surely that doesn't preclude a little discrimination, does it?
The scale of Schubert's first movement is one of the features that make it what it is (like it or not!), just like the intrusive passage before the exposition repeat which gains part of its structural/poetic significance precisely through its intrusiveness, and through its proportion to the movement as a whole, neither of which feature is unique to this work in Schubert's late music so it really isn't good enough to suggest he really didn't know what he was doing.
I'm sorry too if I seem to be dragging this discussion out beyond its useful life, but in fact it's really not just about this Schubert sonata but concerns relationships in general between compositions, interpreters and listeners!
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI'm not sure but I have the impression Caliban was using what is generally known as a figure of speech.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostBrendel thinks he knows better than Schubert.
This seems quite a powerful argument.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostThis seems quite a powerful argument.
But the clincher - particularly apposite in Bolet's case - is that if these "small adjustments" are really so much better than the composer's original (or even "just a teenie weenie bit better"), how come they aren't taken up by other performers? Why is it that only Bolet played Bolet's "small adjustments"? (And why didn't every listener agree that the "adjustments" were necessary.
All Bolet was really saying was that he couldn't get the written text to fit the way he wanted to play it. Which is perhaps why his recordings of those works aren't greatly impressive on listeners who weren't around when he was performing. That's my point - performers come and go; but the works they play stay. Even without the "small adjustments".[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostThis seems quite a powerful argument.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostI'm sorry if I misunderstood, when people call a piece of music "ugly", "weak", lacking in balance, structure and impact - in the form very clearly envisaged by the composer - that generally means they don't like it. What you seem to be saying is that you like it if some parts of it are removed. I don't feel one gets to make those decisions: interesting that you use the word "LOVE" and earlier on you anthropomorphised the "artwork" - surely a love for Schubert's compositions would involve understanding why they're as they are and learning to love those things that one doesn't initially relate to, rather than demanding that they be changed to accord with one's previously held preferences - just as with another human being, one might say.
The scale of Schubert's first movement is one of the features that make it what it is (like it or not!), just like the intrusive passage before the exposition repeat which gains part of its structural/poetic significance precisely through its intrusiveness, and through its proportion to the movement as a whole, neither of which feature is unique to this work in Schubert's late music so it really isn't good enough to suggest he really didn't know what he was doing.
I'm sorry too if I seem to be dragging this discussion out beyond its useful life, but in fact it's really not just about this Schubert sonata but concerns relationships in general between compositions, interpreters and listeners!
I certainly thought I was trying to develop, what I thought might be quite subtle, arguments that concern 'relationships in general between compositions, interpreters and listeners'. 'Anthropomorphising'...clumsy word. It's common for artists of all kinds to talk about the emerging work taking on a life of its own, and seeming to dictate to the artist how it should continue. Or the artist might find him/herself waiting for the art work to suggest how it should finish or reach a satisfying shape...i know an acomplished poet who talks like that, and lots of novelists do. I was making an extension of the idea to the recreative artist, and more questionably, bringing in the Lawrence idea of the artwork knowing better than its creator. All exploratory thinking really...
Anyway, it's the season of goodwill: thanks for your thoughts and insights.
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Re repeats: I've just been reading Brendel's "Music, Sense and Nonsense" where he quotes Edwin Fischer, who quotes Brahms (p149):
"When asked after a performance of the Second Symphony why the exposition was not repeated, Brahms replied: Formerly, when the piece was new to the audience, the repeat was necessary; today, the work is so well known that I can go on without it."
If Brahms thought like that, I suppose it is possible that Schubert might also have.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostRe repeats: I've just been reading Brendel's "Music, Sense and Nonsense" where he quotes Edwin Fischer, who quotes Brahms (p149):
"When asked after a performance of the Second Symphony why the exposition was not repeated, Brahms replied: Formerly, when the piece was new to the audience, the repeat was necessary; today, the work is so well known that I can go on without it."
If Brahms thought like that, I suppose it is possible that Schubert might also have.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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I hesitate to contribute to this lofty ding-dong but this blog post (which echoes what Richard B has been saying) made sense to me:
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostIf Brahms thought like that, I suppose it is possible that Schubert might also have.
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostIf Brahms thought like that
You're quoting Brendel quoting Fischer quoting Brahms (in translation). A little more consideration of what exactly Brahms said, when, and to whom is necessary before we can make any conclusions ... and then go on to ask why, then, around a quarter of Brahms' Sonata structures scattered throughout his career don't have Exposition repeats - didn't the "newness" of those works matter?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostIf.
You're quoting Brendel quoting Fischer quoting Brahms (in translation). A little more consideration of what exactly Brahms said, when, and to whom is necessary before we can make any conclusions ... and then go on to ask why, then, around a quarter of Brahms' Sonata structures scattered throughout his career don't have Exposition repeats - didn't the "newness" of those works matter?
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Originally posted by gurnemanz View PostGetting beyond my job description here - neither pianist nor musicologist but mere punter. I'm just lobbing stuff in from the sidelines. Personally, I would prefer to hear the repeat, but I respect Brendel's argumentation. I am a Germanist, however, and would have been very interested to scrutinise the original quotes and their context. I did google around a bit but could not find anything.
Alison's comment in #122 is perceptive; and IIRC the "taking off" in the Bruckner #3 Thread had the same ignition as this one - the "division" between those who trust the composer's ideas, and those who consider that the performer has a right to alter what the composer wrote in the interests of "interpretation". The arguments will arise again, no doubt.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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