Maybe an exemple of a baroque composer whose indeterminacy approximates the indeterminacy of more recent composers is Frescobaldi. His Toccatas are sectional, and his preface advised the performer to decide for himself which sections to play. Another example would be the whole tradition of unmeasured music in the French baroque and Froberger, where rhythm and phrasing and possibly other things (!) aren’t specified.
In Bach’s contrapuntal music, there has been some interest recently in the degree to which the voices need to be aligned. Keith Hill and Wolfgang Rübsam have suggested that Art of Fugue for example should be played with the voices independent of each other - each voice with its own phrasing and rhythm and tempo - the job of the keyboard player is to bring them together in an interesting, thrilling, poetic way. If you go to Rübsam’s website you’ll see some discussion of this. Hill and Rübsam are inspired by madrigal performance (they say), but the idea seems to have something in common with things in Cage’s music.
In Bach’s contrapuntal music, there has been some interest recently in the degree to which the voices need to be aligned. Keith Hill and Wolfgang Rübsam have suggested that Art of Fugue for example should be played with the voices independent of each other - each voice with its own phrasing and rhythm and tempo - the job of the keyboard player is to bring them together in an interesting, thrilling, poetic way. If you go to Rübsam’s website you’ll see some discussion of this. Hill and Rübsam are inspired by madrigal performance (they say), but the idea seems to have something in common with things in Cage’s music.
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