Originally posted by pastoralguy
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Conductors who think they know better
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostEven more uninteresting to listen to. Chopin's solo piano music is great, but both concertos are a bore ( Cue outrage! )
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostYes. Heaven forbid that the music might actually sound better.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostBut that's what vinteuil is in favour of, rather than sounding as if the instruments written for had no great variation in timbre, etc. over their different registers. How degrading to have such variation evened out.
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Originally posted by Ferretfancy View PostEven more uninteresting to listen to. Chopin's solo piano music is great, but both concertos are a bore ( Cue outrage! )
And I've never been able to understand why Chopin was never able to translate onto the larger canvas his often remarkable formal ingenuity on the small scale.
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostThere seem to be two different types of example. First, arrangements - which never pretend to be by the original composer. I don't see how these meet the criteria for this thread. Then there are blatant tinkerings with the scoring (Mahler with Schumann, Stokowski adding a gong to The Planets). Now those really do need justification.
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There are of course good reasons for altering the text - or at least justifiable ones. Sometimes the published text has bad editorial changes. 19th century Breitkopf bass parts often automatically transpose low Ds and Cs up an octave, whatever the composer wrote. No problem changing those, in my view. A tad more debatable is whether to change some horn passages where it's clear the composer would have written them differently if horns in his day could have played the notes. This is very common in Beethoven. I'm usually OK with this if it doesn'f result in an un-Beethovenian sound. (Weingartner went perhaps a little too far, though the book he wrote is good reading).Last edited by Pabmusic; 13-10-17, 23:52.
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I've heard a couple of recordings of Schumann's Spring Symphony transposing the initial horn call down a third to where it originally was before Schumann realised the horns would need to use hand stopping to play it. It does make for a definite improvement—his instincts were right, the instruments simply weren't (or at least the orchestra he was writing for didn't have any valve horns yet). That said, valve horns were introduced in Schumann's lifetime (and he wrote a Konzertstück and an Adagio & Allegro for them) but he never went back and revised the horn parts in his earlier symphonies, so maybe that's second-guessing him too much.
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Originally posted by kea View PostI've heard a couple of recordings of Schumann's Spring Symphony transposing the initial horn call down a third to where it originally was before Schumann realised the horns would need to use hand stopping to play it. It does make for a definite improvement—his instincts were right, the instruments simply weren't (or at least the orchestra he was writing for didn't have any valve horns yet). That said, valve horns were introduced in Schumann's lifetime (and he wrote a Konzertstück and an Adagio & Allegro for them) but he never went back and revised the horn parts in his earlier symphonies, so maybe that's second-guessing him too much.Last edited by Pabmusic; 14-10-17, 10:36.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostAnd I've never been able to understand why Chopin was never able to translate onto the larger canvas his often remarkable formal ingenuity on the small scale.
More generally, it's impossible to place a strict dividing line between interpretation and interference. For me personally Mahler reorchestrating Schumann is OK but Klemperer cutting Bruckner really isn't. It's just as much a matter of individual taste and feeling about the music as any other question of which music or which interpretation one favours.
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Originally posted by gradus View Post...but modern pianos do not all sound the same, it's just that Steinway has a near-stranglehold. Not that I have anything against Steinways but Fazioli, Bosendorfer, Yamaha, Kawai, Bluthner etc add their own distinctive timbres and it would be good to hear them more often. I've long wished that R3 announcers told us which piano make is being played in broadcast recitals.
That's far too sensible an idea for R3 presenters to undertake! But it would get in the way of inanities and trying to be your mate.
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Originally posted by gradus View Post...but modern pianos do not all sound the same, it's just that Steinway has a near-stranglehold. Not that I have anything against Steinways but Fazioli, Bosendorfer, Yamaha, Kawai, Bluthner etc add their own distinctive timbres and it would be good to hear them more often. I've long wished that R3 announcers told us which piano make is being played in broadcast recitals.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostIndeed, but I was referring to the tendency for modern pianos to lack the degree of difference between registers found on the instruments the composers mentioned were familiar with and had to exploit/contend with.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostWhat you seem to be suggesting (and I'm in full agreement) is that the early prototypes were work-in-progress. I can't imagine composers, who we're used to other instruments that were developed beyond the early apprentice stage, would be ecstatic about the deficiencies of the early pianoforte (the name most commonly used at the time).
The flaw in your suggestion - and forgive me for pointing out something so obvious - is that these composers wrote so frequently for this instrument, when perfectly viable alternatives were readily available. The attractions of the late 18th Century piano were what they wrote for - and what the Music sounds best on. I can't imagine composers, who wrote so well for the instruments they knew, would be ecstatic about their Music being compromised by the homogeneous timbres of the modern piano (the name ironically used for the noisy machine mutated in order to play the work of Rachmaninoff in enormous concert halls ).[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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