Originally posted by ardcarp
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Arrangements for string orchestra - thanks but no!
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Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostAt least in the many cases where the composer didn't authorize the arrangement himself.
Otherwise I broadly agree. Though I am perversely curious to hear some Elliott Carter string quartets arranged for orchestra. >.>
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Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostSurely the balance remains unchanged, but with a weightier sound. The music itself is not "arranged" at all in most instances.I keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Originally posted by kea View PostNothing special about the composer's authorisation. Many of the Shostakovich "chamber symphonies" are pretty disappointing compared to the originals, whereas I'm quite fond of the Verdi/Toscanini string quartet (for example).
Otherwise I broadly agree. Though I am perversely curious to hear some Elliott Carter string quartets arranged for orchestra. >.>
One exception I'd make is the Barber Adagio, which seems to me to acquire a completely different flavour in the full-string version. I don't find the quartet one grief-stricken at all, more aspirational, upwardly striving. Another is the Berg Lyric Suite. Can't think of any others thoughI keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostEA: unless you know of a string band with the same number of violas/cellos as 1st violins I rest my case!
is that volume (or amplitude) isn't linear
2 Violins playing ff aren't perceived to be twice as loud as 1 violin playing ff
and
more than a single instrument will give you (obviously) a completely different sound even if you maintain the same volume in terms of db
so unless you think that 'balance' is only about volume as measured by a meter then the 'balance' of a group of instruments to a line will be very different to that of an ensemble of single instruments to a line.
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostOne of the things about acoustics that many people seem to misunderstand
is that volume (or amplitude) isn't linear
2 Violins playing ff aren't perceived to be twice as loud as 1 violin playing ff
and
more than a single instrument will give you (obviously) a completely different sound even if you maintain the same volume in terms of db
so unless you think that 'balance' is only about volume as measured by a meter then the 'balance' of a group of instruments to a line will be very different to that of an ensemble of single instruments to a line.
And even where the balance is kept numerically equal, as on a Capriccio CD of LvB Op 131 by the 4-to-a-part soloists of the International Musicians Seminar under Sandor Vegh (who surely should have known better!), far too much of the essence of the string quartet (sound and responsiveness between the parts) goes out the window. IMHO of course.
Though I can see that if for some strange reason you don't like the sound of single strings, string-orch arrangements may be your only access to some of the greatest music there isI keep hitting the Escape key, but I'm still here!
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Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View PostMrGG, I don't argue with your comments, indeed concur with most of what you say, but I would simply say from experience live, on radio and LPs/CDs that string orch versions always emphasize the violin parts at the expense of the violas and cellos.
so there is a real significant difference between 4 players and an ensemble
In my experience it's often really hard to get ensembles to break away from the conventions they mostly work with.
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Originally posted by LeMartinPecheur View Postkea: I agree re Shoster, but if he authorised them how can I speak against them? Of course, I don't have to like them!
Originally posted by Barbirollians View PostI have to admit to being rather fond of Mahler's arrangement of the Death and the Maiden .
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It may be a mistake to try to hear a string-orchestral arrangement of a chamber piece as merely a (more, or less, successful) amplified version of the original... surely the Berg Lyric Suite has had an independent life of its own as a (3-movement!) concert piece, similarly the Schoenberg Verklarte Nacht... for me, these two become different works with a new emotional and musical impact, just as the most successful Beethoven examples do (as aforementioned, Bernstein OP.131 - and Von Dohnanyi's OP.95, also with the VPO).
It's a little off-topic, but think of the disconnect between Brahms OP.25 Piano Quartet and Schoenberg's orchestral version of it... the listener finds herself in a parallel universe...
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In the main I agree with the OP: string orchestra arrangements of pieces composed for smaller string ensembles too often remind one of nothing more than an overweight couple dancing the fandango; what one gains in weight is lost in shape, suppleness and the ability to negotiate those tight corners without coming a cropper.
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Originally posted by jayne lee wilson View PostIt may be a mistake to try to hear a string-orchestral arrangement of a chamber piece as merely a (more, or less, successful) amplified version of the original... surely the Berg Lyric Suite has had an independent life of its own as a (3-movement!) concert piece, similarly the Schoenberg Verklarte Nacht... for me, these two become different works with a new emotional and musical impact, just as the most successful Beethoven examples do (as aforementioned, Bernstein OP.131 - and Von Dohnanyi's OP.95, also with the VPO).
It's a little off-topic, but think of the disconnect between Brahms OP.25 Piano Quartet and Schoenberg's orchestral version of it... the listener finds herself in a parallel universe...
Case by case basis, however, is surely the principal defence against SG's assertion here; different personal responses is another. Why only string quartets (or quintets or sextets) anyway? Doesn't SG's observation imply that, for him, at least, most if not all arrangements of music for forces different to those for which it was composed are somehow suspect? Perhaps he will tell us!
The prospect of the five Carter quartets being arranged for string orchestra's an interesting one! I can't quite see anyone doing any of them, though! And what about the other way around, in the case of Strauss's string septet arrangement of his Metamorphosen?...Last edited by ahinton; 05-02-14, 14:31.
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Originally posted by Sir Velo View PostIn the main I agree with the OP: string orchestra arrangements of pieces composed for smaller string ensembles too often remind one of nothing more than an overweight couple dancing the fandango; what one gains in weight is lost in shape, suppleness and the ability to negotiate those tight corners without coming a cropper.
The Brahms Op. 25 in Schönberg's arrangement is another animal altogether; a chamber work for piano and strings in whose new version the piano is dispensed with and an entire symphony orchestra deployed; I find it outrageous in places and outrageously amusing in others! I've no idea what "Brahms the Progressive" would have made of it, but the orchestral repertoire would be poorer for its absence.Last edited by ahinton; 05-02-14, 14:32.
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A more general point.
Some arrangements, versions, remixes, call them whatever are more successful than the original.
I think it's a misunderstanding of what the act of composing entails to assume that it's always a desire for total control of everything. Or even that composers always have a clear and complete idea in their minds of what the music they are making could be.
(Richard will be much more articulate than I am about this i'm sure)
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