Many thanks for all your replies folks,fascinating stuff.
Musical questions and answers thread
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post(?Purely speculative this next bit, but this might be akin to how the brain processes visual information, "translating" two-dimensional line drawings into three-dimensional perspective?)
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Possibly following on from the above discussion...
As I understand it, a player with fine pitch-sensitivity and good understanding of harmonic context will be playing the same note slightly differently in different places in a tonal work with clear modulations, depending on the key it's currently in. Does this mean that 12-tone string music demands to be played as it were in equal temperament in order not to suggest inappropriate tonal contexts? Similarly, do highly chromatic passages in late C19/ early C20 music present intonation problems when it becomes debatable which key was last established and where it is currently headed?
If so, when (with which works) did such problems start? And who sorts out the mess - conductor, leader, section principals?
Do players' fine ears for tuning risk getting blunted along the way?
Sorry, lots of Qs. (Too many?)I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostPossibly following on from the above discussion...
As I understand it, a player with fine pitch-sensitivity and good understanding of harmonic context will be playing the same note slightly differently in different places in a tonal work with clear modulations, depending on the key it's currently in. Does this mean that 12-tone string music demands to be played as it were in equal temperament in order not to suggest inappropriate tonal contexts? Similarly, do highly chromatic passages in late C19/ early C20 music present intonation problems when it becomes debatable which key was last established and where it is currently headed?
If so, when (with which works) did such problems start? And who sorts out the mess - conductor, leader, section principals?
Do players' fine ears for tuning risk getting blunted along the way?
Sorry, lots of Qs. (Too many?)
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amateur51
Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View Post
Do players' fine ears for tuning risk getting blunted along the way?
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I remain vexed about the Satie work.
According to Wiki, John Cage arranged a performance in 1963.
It lasted over 18 hours. One person... was present for the entire performance.
According to the 1971 edition of the Guinness Book of Records: The New York Times critic fell asleep at 4am and the audience dwindled to six. At the conclusion, one of them shouted "Encore!"Pacta sunt servanda !!!
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I've attended several performances, indeed recording one of them at the Almeida Festival 1983, or 1984). I also superimposed 840 performances of a single cycle to produce 'A Vexed Question', which was included in an early Radio 3 'web postcard' interview item where I was interviews by Doc. Walker.Last edited by Bryn; 15-01-14, 15:39.
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Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostAs I understand it, a player with fine pitch-sensitivity and good understanding of harmonic context will be playing the same note slightly differently in different places in a tonal work with clear modulations, depending on the key it's currently in.
Does this mean that 12-tone string music demands to be played as it were in equal temperament in order not to suggest inappropriate tonal contexts?
With Babbitt and Wuorrinen (who thought in terms of equal tempered semitones, rather than in the Tonality-based intervals - in other words, "3 7 6" rather than "minor third [or augmented second] "perfect fifth" "diminished fifth" [or augmented fourth or tritone]) it may be different - that this is Music in which every G# and Ab (for example) are the same pitch. But I'm sure I hear the old differences when I hear the performances of Babbitt that really "do it" for me - or do I just convince myself?
Similarly, do highly chromatic passages in late C19/ early C20 music present intonation problems when it becomes debatable which key was last established and where it is currently headed?
If so, when (with which works) did such problems start? And who sorts out the mess - conductor, leader, section principals?
Do players' fine ears for tuning risk getting blunted along the way?[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostIn his very readable autobiography Flute, Richard Adeney describes rather movingly how this change became apparent to him as he grew older, such that he decided to give up playing.
My question was around whether playing a fair bit of highly chromatic and atonal music was likely to blunt tuning sensitivities in 'simple' tonal music. (Whatever that would be...)I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Richard Barrett
Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostMy question was around whether playing a fair bit of highly chromatic and atonal music was likely to blunt tuning sensitivities in 'simple' tonal music.
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Reading over my #219, all those words trying to describe sounds makes it sound very calculated and clinical, which it isn't really - the calculus involved in a footballer "bending it like Beckham" is quite complex and involved, but the players don't consciously make such calculations before kicking. The practice comes first, the Theory merely describes/analyzes it. Musicians don't "think" (or "make conscious decisions") about intonation - they perform Music, adjusting pitch "instinctively" (the inverted commas because it has had to be learnt, but learnt through experience and listening and trial & error).
And it's not just Serial composers who write/think in Equal Temperament: Shostakovich did, too - the famous Second Violin drone in the Eighth String Quartet (whilst the others are doing their "Daa-dee-DADADA DADADA") is written as an F double sharp, but can only be played on the instrument's open G string.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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anamnesis
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Listening to Schubert 9 this morning, (COE,Abbado) got me thinking (dangerous).
What exactly is a chamber orchestra ?
Is it simply down to the number of musicians involved,do they bring in extra troops for the bigger works ?
Is there repertoire that couldn't be programmed by a co ?
Apparently Bruckner is not out of bounds.
This is a cracking thread btw Alison.
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