There was a slightly facile discussion on R4's Today Programme (just before the 8.30 sport slot) between Jane Glover and Norman Lebrecht. It was in response to Telegraph letters, apparently [I haven't seen them!] complaining that music is 'getting faster'. I must say the snippets played from Offenbach's Barcarolle didn't really do much to illustrate the argument. (A Bach Brandenburg from two camps might have done better.) However, once again a news programme is devoting a slot...albeit a small one... to the arts.
Classical music getting faster?
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I didn't quite catch it - not sure - was Lebrecht referred to as a musicologist?
Was it Monday morning, they had a piece about the violinist who gave the first performance of the Elgar violin concerto in Albania, and others in Roumania - Alda Dizdari. And exceptionally for Today - given in excess of a whole minute as the 9a.m. pips approached - that's 60 seconds or slightly more folks (an age in the assumed attention span of their audience for Today producers) to play the 2nd theme.
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Sometimes it's the more recent performance that are played more slowly:-
Furtwangler 1948: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TI8dbqmZqMg
Krips 1965: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rim6YZVuU74
Krips was even slower for his later Concertgebouw version.Last edited by Eine Alpensinfonie; 13-10-18, 15:59.
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Mainstream performances became very slow sometime between the 1950s and 2000s (although with a few idiosyncratic slow performers earlier on) and are only now starting to return to their intended tempi, or at least the tempi at which they were commonly played in the early twentieth century. These may still be quite divergent from the tempi favoured by the composers (eg I recall that Beethoven got through the premiere of his 9th Symphony in three quarters of an hour, regardless of metronome marks; even "historically informed" performances these days take about an hour)
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Originally posted by kea View PostMainstream performances became very slow sometime between the 1950s and 2000s (although with a few idiosyncratic slow performers earlier on) and are only now starting to return to their intended tempi, or at least the tempi at which they were commonly played in the early twentieth century.
I recall that Beethoven got through the premiere of his 9th Symphony in three quarters of an hour[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Ok, I can't find the source either. There is another source attributing a time of 65 minutes to the Vienna premiere, which may or may not have included the applause between movements and pause for Beethoven to acknowledge the audience. (Albrecht, from the conversation books & other contemporary sources.) I can't remember where I might have seen the claim that it lasted 45 minutes but it doesn't seem to have much corroboration among scholarship in any case.
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Originally posted by kea View PostOk, I can't find the source either. There is another source attributing a time of 65 minutes to the Vienna premiere, which may or may not have included the applause between movements and pause for Beethoven to acknowledge the audience. (Albrecht, from the conversation books & other contemporary sources.) I can't remember where I might have seen the claim that it lasted 45 minutes but it doesn't seem to have much corroboration among scholarship in any case.
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Originally posted by kea View PostOk, I can't find the source either. There is another source attributing a time of 65 minutes to the Vienna premiere, which may or may not have included the applause between movements and pause for Beethoven to acknowledge the audience. (Albrecht, from the conversation books & other contemporary sources.) I can't remember where I might have seen the claim that it lasted 45 minutes but it doesn't seem to have much corroboration among scholarship in any case.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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The Smart answer to this question appears to be Henry. It is he who claimed Beethoven to have said the 9th should last 45 minutes. See https://www.quora.com/In-Beethovens-...epeats-are-not and serch for "Henry Smart". Trouble is, Henry would have been but 14 years old when Beethoven popped his clogs.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostThe Smart answer to this question appears to be Henry. It is he who claimed Beethoven to have said the 9th should last 45 minutes. See https://www.quora.com/In-Beethovens-...epeats-are-not and serch for "Henry Smart". Trouble is, Henry would have been but 14 years old when Beetoven popped his clogs.
(Henry Smart snr was, besides being leader of the Philharmonic Society orchestra, part proprietor of a brewery. Just sayin' ... )
[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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