...yes, there is no one way of doing stuff. Practical considerations rule.
BaL 20.10.18 - Bach: Keyboard concertos - BWV.1052-58
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostMark Lowther said something to the effect ‘what happens in the control room, the luxury that wasn’t available to Bach and his performers’. Or to his audience, I suppose. How much or in what way does this issue come into when thinking about performing/listening to Bach’s (or Vivaldi, Corelli and others) music?
Personally, I feel that, because I listen to recordings (and broadcasts) in a 16-foot-square room - a highly artificial way of hearing most of the Music I play - all the approaches can give different perspectives on a work, widening my appreciation of it. It can give a "false" idea of what to expect in a Live performance, of course - but that's to be taken as read: people don't expect the sort of close-ups you get in a film/TV programme when going to the theatre.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostBaroque violins with gut strings are much quieter and used 3 or 4 to a part will not overwhelm either a chamber choir or a harpsichord.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostWe aren't talking about "overwhelming" it though, but showcasing it as a solo instrument. I'm basing this on attending my fair share of both well- and badly-balanced baroque ensembles. Anyway, as far as I know there aren't any properly sourced arguments in favour of "3 or 4 to a part" being used in Bach's ensemble music (apart from the idea that it's "reasonable" in some way, based on the notion that something called a concerto necessarily requires an "orchestra" which was something of an alien conception to Bach). Whereas on the other hand there are many indications that this was probably not the case, including as Bryn says the size of the room that was used for the performances. Indeed, practical considerations are always foremost, but practical considerations are what composers work with when conceiving and writing their scores. Often the idea of "what the composer would have wanted" rears its head, but this I think misunderstands the relationship between practical considerations and the composition process.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostAnd it's not just during Bach's time that the matter of performance space had a role. I am particiularly taken buy the Schoonderwoerd/Cristofori recordings of Beethoven's percussive keyboard concertos. The size of the ensembles used for these was determined by the size of the original venues in which they were first performed by Beethoven and co. For opera 15, 19, 37 and 61a, the string complement of Cristofori was 2 violins, 2 violas, 1 cello and 1 double bass. For opera 58 and 73 and extra cello was added.
I did find it a bit difficult getting used to OVPP in Bach's vocal ensemble music, probably partly because of the rather large outlay involved in acquiring the sets of recordings by Harnoncourt/Leonhardt, Koopman and Gardiner! - but the thought that if Bach wrote the music for these forces one should at least take seriously the idea of listening to them in that form eventually proved decisive, and actually I'm not very keen on listening to them sung by larger groups any more. I didn't have this problem with Bach's instrumental ensemble music (as recorded for example by Leonhardt, Café Zimmermann etc.) because it always sounded "self-evidently" right to me in terms of clarity, texture and balance, without any help from recording technology. I take the point that a recording is an artificial construct from the start, but using this artificiality to support spurious ideas of what's "reasonable" in terms of performer numbers seems to me inappropriate.Last edited by Richard Barrett; 21-10-18, 17:46.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostFor opera 15, 19, 37 and 61a, the string complement of Cristofori was 2 violins, 2 violas, 1 cello and 1 double bass. For opera 58 and 73 and extra cello was added.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThanks for clarifying the 'cello numbers - can I also check that two each of first and second violins is also meant?
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
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They have been on my "list" (it's become more of a mobius strip, with a seeming infinite capacity) - but whilst I don't have recordings of these Bach works, this rectification might take some time.
I've been trying (without success) to find out the size of orchestra used on the van Immerseel/Tafelmusik/Weil set of the Beethoven Piano Concertos (etc) from the late '90s - anyone know?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThey have been on my "list" (it's become more of a mobius strip, with a seeming infinite capacity) - but whilst I don't have recordings of these Bach works, this rectification might take some time.
I've been trying (without success) to find out the size of orchestra used on the van Immerseel/Tafelmusik/Weil set of the Beethoven Piano Concertos (etc) from the late '90s - anyone know?
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Back to Bach. I think there was an instrumental band of around 22 at Weimar and 18 at Cothen. It's fair to assume that at least two thirds would have been string players...of which Bach was one. He was Kappellmeister in both those places, but a member of the band. [I'm writing from memory here.]
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostBack to Bach. I think there was an instrumental band of around 22 at Weimar and 18 at Cothen. It's fair to assume that at least two thirds would have been string players...of which Bach was one. He was Kappellmeister in both those places, but a member of the band. [I'm writing from memory here.]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThey have been on my "list" (it's become more of a mobius strip, with a seeming infinite capacity) - but whilst I don't have recordings of these Bach works, this rectification might take some time.
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