Originally posted by Tony
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Old and new instruments
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostRealistically, if you want the sound of a period instrument, it makes more sense to play on copies. Mozart never played on 250-year-old instruments - only brand-spanking new ones.
But having heard Christian Blackshaw playing Mozart at Snape Maltings on a modern Steinway, I find it difficult to imagine anyone reaching the same inner depths of the music on a period piano e forte.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostBut having heard Christian Blackshaw playing Mozart at Snape Maltings on a modern Steinway, I find it difficult to imagine anyone reaching the same inner depths of the music on a period piano e forte.
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Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostClearly you've never heard Kristian Bezuidenhout or Ronald Brautigam. I recommend a course of both to remedy that deficiency.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostI would maintain that instruments have improved over time
Instruments have certainly made use of technological innovations in various ways, but mainly they've developed alongside the music that was written for them: as composers' and performers' priorities have changed, instruments have changed with them (for example to make a sound more suitable for larger performing spaces, or to facilitate a wider pitch-range, etc., with a reciprocal effect on composers of course). So surely if one holds that instruments have improved over time, surely it's logical to claim also that music has improved over time as well... which wouldn't have been an unusual claim to make in past centuries maybe, but I don't think anyone would say that now, would they?
And while it's often asserted that instruments have improved over time, this "improvement" is generally deemed to have stopped at a certain point, usually around the late 19th/early 20th century, whereas the logic of improvement over time might be thought to imply that a digital synthesizer is an "improvement" on the keyboard instruments which preceded it. Again, I don't think very many people would make such a claim, but wouldn't it be a logical claim to make, based on the opinion quoted?
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Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostThat old one!
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostThe technological improvements are often designed to enable greater subtlety of response to the performer.
But my main point was that if instruments are regarded as having "improved" surely it's a logical step to think that the music they play has "improved" too, and this point you haven't addressed.
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostOft repeated because it may be true. The technological improvements are often designed to enable greater subtlety of response to the performer. .
nope, not true
the Shakuhachi is capable of more subtle response and nuance at the "expense" of massive volume and projection
Electric pianos, for instance, are fakes that attempt to mimic the real thing
and (as Richard points out) i'm not sure that the "limitations" of Supercollider or Max MSP are any more significant than the inability of the modern clarinet to play chords ?
But my main point was that if instruments are regarded as having "improved" surely it's a logical step to think that the music they play has "improved" too, and this point you haven't addressed.
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But my main point was that if instruments are regarded as having "improved" surely it's a logical step to think that the music they play has "improved" too, and this point you haven't addressed.
I was wondering this too ?
HS
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Richard Tarleton
Alan Walker, Liszt: The Virtuoso Years, 1811-1847, p. 287
Not until the great firms of Steinway and Bechstein produced their powerfully reinforced instruments in the 1860s did Liszt's repertoire of the 1840s come into its own. Necessity was the mother of invention.
Just a thought.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Hornspieler View PostI would not say "improved" but I would say that the possibilities of what can be written have been increased by the development of the instruments' scope.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Richard Barrett View PostIndeed. But at the same time other possibilities diminish, as you, being a brass player would no doubt be aware; and given that this is the case wouldn't it be more appropriate to speak of both instruments and music evolving rather than "improving"? And this also applies to an example like Liszt writing music that was impossible to play on the pianos of his time (though a concrete example or two of this might be useful! because I'm not aware of specific impossibilities in Liszt's piano music) - any changes in piano construction subsequent to this could be just as easily be described as "adaptations to Liszt's specific needs" (which then might be taken up by other composers) rather than "improvements", no?
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostIt isn't an exact science. Adding valves to horns was probably an "improvement". But the Vienna Philharmonic regards the later double horn as a retrograde step in terms of the actual tone of the instrument.
A reduced Vienna Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Daniel Harding, in a delightful selection of Mozart arias.
In one of them, the soprano soloist was accompanied by a two-horn obligato throughout. Superb playing - and they were both using rotary valved full double Alexander horns.
I'm sure that Mozart himself would have been delighted with the result.
As I get older, I become more and more convinced, EA, that "Nostalgia is not what it used to be".
HSLast edited by Hornspieler; 14-09-13, 06:10.
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by Hornspieler View PostI'm sure that Mozart himself would have been delighted with the result.
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