Originally posted by Pianoman
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Instruments you struggle with
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I don't have any problems with harpsichords (though I regret their lack of dynamic range), clavichords and straight-strung pianos. Those earlier pianos are a different matter. I see them as instruments very much on the deveopment stage. As for the argument that these were the instruments the composers wrote for, it's a compelling argument, but composers generally welcomed newer instruments as they appeared, so perhaps were not content with what they had.
I would suggest that, in the case of Liszt, the ideal piano for his music has yet to be designed.
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"Can you honestly prefer to hear eg Beethoven's PC4 on a fp than a concert grand?" (Cloughie)
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostWithout hesitation yes. Thinking of the evolution of instruments as consisting of "improvements" is rather akin to thinking of the evolution of music in the same way, surely. Musical styles change, and instruments are invented or developed or discarded to take account of those changes, not to play the same music "better".Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostI can, cloughie - the range of colours from that instrument makes modern instruments intended to play Rachmaninoff in Carnegie Hall sound ... well, monochrome in comparison. Getting the sound that Beethoven was more used to - as opposed to something he'd never heard - reveals so much about balance, timbre, and texture that are lost in 20th Century instruments.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostI don't have any problems with harpsichords (though I regret their lack of dynamic range), clavichords and straight-strung pianos. Those earlier pianos are a different matter. I see them as instruments very much on the development stage. As for the argument that these were the instruments the composers wrote for, it's a compelling argument, but composers generally welcomed newer instruments as they appeared, so perhaps were not content with what they had.
I was privileged a couple of weeks ago to hear the opening of Beethoven's "Pathetique" sonata played on Haydn's grand piano, an English Longman & Broderip of 1795, by Alec Cobbe at Hatchlands. The sheer excitement of this performance was extraordinary - an edginess, a sense that the instrument was being played at its limits, giving more than one expected possible from a piano of this period. This, I felt, was what Beethoven was all about. The Pathetique sounds marvellous on a modern piano. But I am afraid, rather boring by comparison.
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