I don't think audience conventions at the time the music was written should be of any relevance to the conventions applicable today. We are not talking about HIPP audiences here and if we were there would be all kinds of different behaviour even in a single concert: inter-movement applause, chattering, in a Haydn or Mozart symphony, factional catcalls or riots in some Berlioz works, no inter-movement applause in some late C19 and C20 works. The behaviour of audiences in the late C18 was surely a reflection of the lowly status of composers compared with the predominantly aristocratic audience, which is completely different from the way those composers are viewed today. Was Haydn's loud chord in the Surprise symphony just a joke or an expression of irritation at the London audience: "now will you listen?"
The situation today is where we have a partial breakdown of the convention that grew up in the late C19 and C20 of no inter-movement applause, though it still operates to quite an extent - especially at chamber music concerts and solo recitals. I suggest that despite the defence of such applause by various commentators including some conductors it is quite rare for those who know the music and know about the convention to applaud between movements; those who are applauding are those who either do not know the music well, or do not know the convention (or both). Personally I don't much mind inter-movement applause in orchestral concerts but don't like it in chamber music or piano recitals - I really wouldn't want it after the first movement of Beethoven's op 127 quartet, for instance. Why couldn't it be left to the conductor/ensemble leader/recitalist to ask for an announcement to be made that they would appreciate it if there were no applause until the end of the work, if that's what they want (as you have announcements about turning mobile phones off)?
The situation today is where we have a partial breakdown of the convention that grew up in the late C19 and C20 of no inter-movement applause, though it still operates to quite an extent - especially at chamber music concerts and solo recitals. I suggest that despite the defence of such applause by various commentators including some conductors it is quite rare for those who know the music and know about the convention to applaud between movements; those who are applauding are those who either do not know the music well, or do not know the convention (or both). Personally I don't much mind inter-movement applause in orchestral concerts but don't like it in chamber music or piano recitals - I really wouldn't want it after the first movement of Beethoven's op 127 quartet, for instance. Why couldn't it be left to the conductor/ensemble leader/recitalist to ask for an announcement to be made that they would appreciate it if there were no applause until the end of the work, if that's what they want (as you have announcements about turning mobile phones off)?
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