I don't think that this has yet been mentioned, but isn't the applause between movements issue largely focused upon public performances of orchestral works or other pieces for relatively large forces performed in relatively large auditoria before relatively large audiences? I'm trying to imagine what likelihood there might be, for example, of applause between the movements of Ferneyhough's Third Quartet or Shostakovich's Fifteenth ditto, or Schmitt's Piano Quintet and what reactions to any such inter-movement applause it might incite from non-applauders at such events - or, for that matter, the proportion of audience members that might applaud between the movements of Bruckner's Fifth Symphony in a performance space capable of accommodating 2,500 listeners but whose performance takes place there before less than 500 audience members; in other words, mights this issue be of noticeably less pertinence in the cases of (a) chamber works performed in more intimate venues or (b) big orchestral ones played before audiences whose members occupy only, say, some 20% of available seats in larger performance spaces?
Such possible inconsistency may not necessarily impact upon some people's arguments on this topic but I do think that they're nevertheless rather too important to dismiss altogether.
Such possible inconsistency may not necessarily impact upon some people's arguments on this topic but I do think that they're nevertheless rather too important to dismiss altogether.
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