Originally posted by Bryn
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"Early Music"
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Anyone mentioned Landowska's book 'Musique ancienne', originally published in 1909*? I suspect she was referring mainly to the Baroque, esp JSBach.
Her pert response to Casals re JSB suggests she even had an idea of HIPP (even if she wasn't especially 'informed') - "You play it your way, I'll play it his way."
* Musique ancienne. Le mépris pour les anciens. La force de la sonorité. Le style. L'interprétation. Les virtuoses. Les mécènes et la musique. Avec la collaboration de M. Henri Lew-Landowski
Material description : In-8°, 271 p.
Note : Note : La couv. porte : Musique ancienne. Style. Interprétation. Instruments. Artistes
Edition : Paris : Mercure de France , 1909
Auteur du texte : Wanda Landowska (1879-1959)
Contributeur : Henryk Lew-LandowskiIt 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 Bryn View PostCPE Bach an example of an 'Early Music' composer? That really is stretching it. Why not consider all composers of the Classical period, Beethoven included, as 'Early Music' composers?
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostPerhaps if Bbm had started a Thread called "What Music written before c1600 are you listening to now?", we might be listing pieces by now.
(After my smartalek initial post about "just before teatime" that everyone would have the good taste to pretend hadn't happened.)
Also...."Ancienne" - surely that should really mean early or even the early part of early unless someone has a very modern view and considers almost all of history as way back!
On another note, does anyone know if Richard Terry had a musical son with a first name also starting with the letter "R"? I know it is oblique but it is a serious question!
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Originally posted by Lat-Literal View PostOn another note, does anyone know if Richard Terry had a musical son with a first name also starting with the letter "R"? I know it is oblique but it is a serious question!
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Originally posted by subcontrabass View PostThis site ( https://runciman.lornahen.com/lineag...vegibbsweb.pdf ) lists a son, two of whose first names begin with "R". He served as a pilot in the RAF before and during World War 2 (see http://www.bbm.org.uk/Terry.htm ). Died in 1975. Any musical skills seem to be undocumented.
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Originally posted by Lat-Literal View PostAlso...."Ancienne" - surely that should really mean early or even the early part of early unless someone has a very modern view and considers almost all of history as way back!
Why does anyone need to know? (I mean, why does any particular individual need to have a chronologically precise definition, more or less?)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 Post
Why does anyone need to know? (I mean, why does any particular individual need to have a chronologically precise definition, more or less?)Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by jean View PostTerms such as Renaissance, Baroque, Classical, Romantic have boundaries it's worth arguing about. Early Music doesn't (didn't ever) belong to the same taxonomy.
... I agree : I don't think the term 'early music' by itself any longer has much meaning. And it's an area I worked in for quite a few years.
Yes, it began with a chronological sense - medieval, renaissance perhaps. As practitioners developed an ever greater sense of 'Historically Informed Performance Practice' they also moved into later and later repertoire - Baroque, Classical, Romantic. Other words were tried - 'authentic', 'period performance' and so on - but many of the structures concerned - OUP's 'Early Music', 'Early Music Today', 'Early Music News', 'Early Music Review', the Early Music Centre, the Early Music Network, the Early Music Shop, the Early Music Show, the York Early Music Festival, the Greenwich etc etc etc were saddled with the 'Early' title even as the periods they were dealing with no longer had any necessary 'early' sense chronologically. So for them, 'early' came to mean 'Historically Informed'. But for many listeners there is still a hankering after a chronological sense, which I think no longer exists.
.Last edited by vinteuil; 30-11-15, 15:04.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostThe problem is that like 'early' the adjective is not specifically musical/artistic (early morning, early bird, early potatoes) so is unlikely to have exactly the same meaning at every time and for every person.
(Modernism is now a historical movement)
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Originally posted by french frank View PostThe problem is that like 'early' the adjective is not specifically musical/artistic (early morning, early bird, early potatoes) so is unlikely to have exactly the same meaning at every time and for every person. (Modernism is now a historical movement)
Why does anyone need to know? (I mean, why does any particular individual need to have a chronologically precise definition, more or less?)
Also, I'm now chomping at the bit to question the timing of both romanticism and impressionism and the supposed distinctions between the two because my instinct is to place romanticism in classical music later than it is generally placed. Which I suppose would rationally enable Early Music to move forward a bit, albeit that it would be a big muddle.Last edited by Lat-Literal; 30-11-15, 15:17.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostI seem to recall, from my O Level French days, that ancien or ancienne, preceding the noun, means "former"; it is only when placed after it that it means "ancient".
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostTerrifying, no??
I agree with Vinteuil. If a new group is formed, say the Early Music Ensemble, they may wish to define for themselves where they want to focus and what they won't play eg no Baroque. I remember Andrew Manze presenting an Early Music Show which included Mozart - but there's nothing to say Mozart can't also be a Classical composer.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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