Help! I don't have the score and am in a quandary regarding the observing or not of the exposition repeat in the first movement. When the 1961 Rosen/Stravinsky recording was issued on LP, the repeat was observed, as it was when Richter recorded it in 1984, and indeed it has been in every other performance of the work that I have heard. However, in every CD transfer of the Rosen/Stravinsky recording (including the new Sony Rosen boxed set) the repeat had been excised. Did the composer change his mind about the repeat, or is this just sheer recidivist insulting incompetence by Sony?
Stravinsky's Movements for Piano and Orchestra
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The repeat is marked in the score - together with prima volta and seconda volta bars, so four bars of Music is lost if the repeat isn't observed (or a redundant extra four bars added, I suppose, if they're played but the repeat isn't done?!) - none of the literature I own on the work (White, Babbitt, Walsh, Routh, Straus) mention any change-of-mind from the composer, nor is any ossia marked in th score. On the whole, recidivist insulting incompetence is the more likely "reason".[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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I decided that if Sony are not going to correct their error, I would have a go at faking it myself. So, having checked the overall dynamics of the exposition and its repeat in on the LP version, and found that Rosen played the repeat marginally more softly than the first time (a 1dB difference in the RMS level), I ripped the first movement from the new CD box version, copied the exposition (minus the first ending), dropped its RMS level by 1dB and pasted it between the first and repeat endings. Sounds quite convincing, and at least it's less of a mess than Sony made of their edit.
PM me is you have the CD and would find my reconstruction edit of the first movement useful.
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Originally posted by bryn View Posti decided that if sony are not going to correct their error, i would have a go at faking it myself. So, having checked the overall dynamics of the exposition and its repeat in on the lp version, and found that rosen played the repeat marginally more softly than the first time (a 1db difference in the rms level), i ripped the first movement from the new cd box version, copied the exposition (minus the first ending), dropped its rms level by 1db and pasted it between the first and repeat endings. Sounds quite convincing, and at least it's less of a mess than sony made of their edit.
Pm me is you have the cd and would find my reconstruction edit of the first movement useful.
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Indeed, as mentioned earlier in this thread, I do not have the score, so it was a combination of fg's comment re. the clear presence of the repeat in the score, and Raymond Clarke's response to 'Scratcher"s review on amazon.co.uk that led me to attempt the fake but effective 'reconstruction'.
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Bryn
You might have discovered this already.
The score is available here:
I have just treated myself to a s/h copy of the Crossley performance on Sony.
I have the Rosen, Beroff, and Mustonen too, but not the Osborne. Anyone have it and like it?
I see too that there is a new recording on Chandos: Bavouzet/Sao Paolo/Tortelier.
I have a distant memory of a review of a recording (perhaps the Hyperion one when it came out) that mentioned a disparity in timing of the first movement (presumably in comparison with the Rosen version), wondering if it was simply played much more slowly! The reviewer must not have known about the repeat!
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostBryn
You might have discovered this already.
The score is available here:
I have just treated myself to a s/h copy of the Crossley performance on Sony.
I have the Rosen, Beroff, and Mustonen too, but not the Osborne. Anyone have it and like it?
I see too that there is a new recording on Chandos: Bavouzet/Sao Paolo/Tortelier.
I have a distant memory of a review of a recording (perhaps the Hyperion one when it came out) that mentioned a disparity in timing of the first movement (presumably in comparison with the Rosen version), wondering if it was simply played much more slowly! The reviewer must not have know about the repeat!
It's most irritating that Sony has perpetutated its error in the new Rosen box.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostDare we hope that this new set has the repeat restored?
http://www.prestoclassical.co.uk/r/Sony/88875026162
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostAlas, not restored. It's the same as in the earlier CD version I have (the timing is 2'20" in both). Otherwise, the re-mastering of the earlier recordings is impeccable (the 1946 Symphony in Three Movements does not sound like a recording made almost 70 years ago).
Too bad that the opportunity to correct this editing error was not taken.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostOrdered the set yesterday; looking forward to being reunited with the original LP cover artwork, which will bring back many happy memories.
Too bad that the opportunity to correct this editing error was not taken.
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostContrary to what I said in the earlier post - and I can't check as I neither have a score nor know the work - I've read a suggestion in a post on another forum that the repeat has been included. I hope that Pulcinella will be able to clarify the position in due course.
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