I had always thought that the idea behind rubato is to give "shape" to phrasing; to point out moments of particular structural significance; and/or to prevent "mechanical" performance.
The reason I ask is that I was recently at a concert given by the Vienna Piano Trio; otherwise very enjoyable, it was marred for me by their habit of putting a slight (say a fifth of a second) but unignorable "break" between a great many of the phrases, creating a "hiccup" that acted for me like watching somebody speaking with a bit of spinach stuck between their teeth - eventually, you can't concentrate on whatever they're saying because your fascinated by the "flaw".
It recurred again and again with such predictability, that if its intention were to act as a sort of rubato-like feature, it failed significantly. Have I missed the point?
The reason I ask is that I was recently at a concert given by the Vienna Piano Trio; otherwise very enjoyable, it was marred for me by their habit of putting a slight (say a fifth of a second) but unignorable "break" between a great many of the phrases, creating a "hiccup" that acted for me like watching somebody speaking with a bit of spinach stuck between their teeth - eventually, you can't concentrate on whatever they're saying because your fascinated by the "flaw".
It recurred again and again with such predictability, that if its intention were to act as a sort of rubato-like feature, it failed significantly. Have I missed the point?
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