Originally posted by salymap
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I am certainly no expert but remember rehearsals where Beecham or Sargent would explain to the orchestra
that if old so-and so- were alive today he would have added trombones, not scored that passage thus,etc. Sacrilege or legitimate tinkering ??
that if old so-and so- were alive today he would have added trombones, not scored that passage thus,etc. Sacrilege or legitimate tinkering ??
Trombones are amongs the oldest of instruments, available to Monteverdi, Bach, Mozart when they were alive. Had they been appropriate (as in Don Giovanni, so-and-so could easily have added them.
Such suggestions always sound as silly (or as legitimate) to me as if someone had said "if old so-and-so were alive today, he'd've added Kazoos, Steel Pans and a Stylophone."
And surely the composers of the past wanted as large an orchestra as they could muster for their new work.
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