Originally posted by Heldenleben
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Our Summer BAL No 76 Mozart Piano Concerto No 23 K488
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View Postbut I imagine that much of the time there would have been less system and more "that sounds more or less OK, let's get on with it".It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostIt may be heresy to suggest this but I'm going to suggest it anyway - that the vast majority of those listening in Mozart's day, AND the vast majority listening now, don't find their listening pleasure diminished by intonation which is consistently a quarter tone off.
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostHave you ever heard music that's played "consistently a quarter tone off"? I think you'd find it pretty weird.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostEven BIS and CPO, Soli doe Gloria, Musik Museum, NMC, Chandos or Alpha?..Naive and Passacaille, Aparte......Most of the intense creativity and adventurousness is found among such independents and smaller labels now... and for some decades back.......
Zukunftsmusik! I raise my glass.....
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostSurely music played inconsistently a quarter tone off would sound even weirder?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostIt may be heresy to suggest this but I'm going to suggest it anyway - that the vast majority of those listening in Mozart's day, AND the vast majority listening now, don't find their listening pleasure diminished by intonation which is consistently a quarter tone off.
Oh just read #82 or should that be b82
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostBut you can hopefully tell the difference between a historical concert instrument and a honky-tonk. If not, . . .
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostDon’t tell string quartets - the ones I’ve met talk of little else! Obviously no one sits with a tuning fork or oscilloscope monitoring these things but a consistent quarter tone difference between piano and orchestra would have me wincing . Likewise if a piano note goes out of tune either with the others or with itself I find myself (if I know the piece well enough ) dreading it’s reappearance. Part of the skill of a violin player is sometimes to play slightly flat or sharp to create an effect but consistently out of tune (or even inconsistently ) isn’t ignorable I think. Mind you it all depends what you mean by out of tune …
Oh just read #82 or should that be b82
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Originally posted by Heldenleben View PostThis is getting a bit “what did the record companies ever do for us “ isn’t it ? Yes but I think a lot of the indies stepped in when the majors had wrung the dishcloth dry. Turned out there was still a bit more water in it if you ran a tight kitchen . That is no million pound spend on candles and flowers if you understand the reference !
.. So many examples, just one: I read Hans Keller's seminal essay "Music 1975" when it appeared in Ian Hamilton's New Review (which also published some of Ian McEwan's early stories, Peter Porter's wonderful poems...etc....). Enthralled and fascinated, I saw the footnote referring to "Nikos Skalkottas....a small late Beethoven"...
I couldn't find any recordings then..... but years later, BIS began their great survey in the late 90s.....only recently has there been an attempt to cover similar repertoire, by...Naxos....
Go figure etc.
(A bit more water? Candles & Flowers?....Sorry, WAY more to it...)
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostBut never forget the POV of a mere music loving listener (if an insatiably curious one), such as myself...I owe those companies' and their initiatives so much....
.. So many examples, just one: I read Hans Keller's seminal essay "Music 1975" when it appeared in Ian Hamilton's New Review (which also published some of Ian McEwan's early stories, Peter Porter's wonderful poems...etc....). Enthralled and fascinated, I saw the footnote referring to "Nikos Skalkottas....a small late Beethoven"...
I couldn't find any recordings then..... but years later, BIS began their great survey in the late 90s.....only recently has there been an attempt to cover similar repertoire, by...Naxos....
Go figure etc.
(A bit more water? Candles & Flowers?....Sorry, WAY more to it...)
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I think the first time I heard an 18th century piano, probably in the early 1970s, was on the recording made in 1967 (and mentioned here before) of CPE Bach's concerto for harpsichord, piano and orchestra featuring most of the luminaries recording for "Das alte Werk" at that time. To me it always had a highly attractive sound (and it should be noted in passing that the aforementioned concerto couldn't be convincingly played on a "modern" piano on account of the enormous difference in volume between it and the harpsichord!) and back then I did my best to snap up anything and everything recorded on such instruments. My point here is that in the end I don't prefer to listen to Mozart concertos on such instruments because they occupy some historical moral high ground but because the sound and the way it combines with the accompanying ensemble is more to my taste; which is no doubt partly because these are the characteristics composed into the music when it was written, but in the end it comes down to how one finds one's way to a deeper relationship with such works. Whatever facilitates that process is the "right way". I think most people who prefer the HIP way of doing things would probably agree.
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Originally posted by BBMmk2 View PostAnybody recommend a recording, please?
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