Originally posted by makropulos
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Musical questions and answers thread
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostI don't know if you've tried just following a score, but that can be very helpful. Pick something straightforward that you know and like very well and get hold of a score (local library, or imslp online, for instance) and just get used to following the music. Take notice as things happen, and begin to anticipate. Try to hear the difference as things happen in the score.
This won't answer questions like your last one, but it will give them some context.
A while back I did borrow a score of the Rite of Spring no less.
Although I couldn't follow it bar by bar,I didn't get hopelessly lost.
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Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View PostCouple of question about piano music if I may.
In this clip what doe the numbers against some of the notes signify ?
Also the Ped marking,how does the player know which pedal to use ?I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostThe numbers are fingerings, 1 for the thumb to 5 for the little finger. Ped always means the sustaining pedal; the so-called 'soft' pedal is indicated by una corda (one string, which is what the mechanism does - ensure that only one string out of (usually) three is struck). To cancel it, the indication is tre corde or tutte le corde.
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Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View PostAh,as simple as that,many thanks LMP
But…
You can still buy Star Folio piano books and even the most recent reprints use the "English" system which uses a plus sign for the thumb and 1-4 for the fingers. Being obsolete doesn't make it any less annoying.
Continental fingering: 1,2,3,4,5
English fingering: +,1,2,3,4
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Honoured Guest
Don't leave it us tantalised with only half the story, Ena. How does the Star Folio notate pedalling?
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Originally posted by mercia View Post....... then of course there are three-pedal pianos, but I couldn't tell you the Italian term for applying the middle one
(For those who would like to know, whilst the "usual" Sustaining pedal holds down every note that's played for as long as the pedal is kept down, the Third pedal only sustains the notes that are held down at the moment that the Pedal is depressed - not those played afterwards. This enables performers to keep a chord held smoothly underneath a rapid, staccato passage.)[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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clive heath
Without having a score to hand, my guess is that the pedal marks are not the composers, and maybe not the fingering either. Beethoven was very sparing in his use of the pedal unlike some of his interpreters who drown his music in a sea of slush like watercolours running in the rain.
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Roehre
Originally posted by clive heath View PostWithout having a score to hand, my guess is that the pedal marks are not the composers, and maybe not the fingering either. Beethoven was very sparing in his use of the pedal unlike some of his interpreters who drown his music in a sea of slush like watercolours running in the rain.
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Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View PostAs ever guys,many thanks for the replies.
So would it be normal for a composer to add fingering and pedal instuctions to piano music,or do they tend to be added later by others.
I'm sure I've seen the same piece with and without these instructions.
Fingering ? it's up to the player IMV
(I would only write bowing marks in if I wanted a specific articulation or effect)
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Roehre
Originally posted by EdgeleyRob View PostAs ever guys,many thanks for the replies.
So would it be normal for a composer to add fingering and pedal instuctions to piano music,or do they tend to be added later by others.
I'm sure I've seen the same piece with and without these instructions.
There are some notable exceptions here too: the piano trio in B-flat WoO 39 [a slight one mvt work lasting some 6 minutes]was dedicated to a young lady of the tender age of ten, Maximilliane Brentano, eager to learn to play the piano.
For her Beethoven wrote down the fingering, even in the manuscript of this lovely little piece.
She managed to play it well.
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