Piano Forum
Piano Board => Repertoire => Topic started by: trazom on July 20, 2010, 05:37:25 PM
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In Debussy's 4th Prelude from Book I: "Les sons et les parfums tournent dans l'air du soir"
I'm confused on Measure 29 in which there are two consecutive F5s in the right hand. In my best edition (hands down more accurate than the other two that I have) the first of these F5s has a sharp placed in front of it (making them both sharp).
A sharp here seems very odd -- it disrupts the perfect octaves that are otherwise present in the RH for that measure (as the higher F6 has no sharp marked). It makes more sense to place the sharp before the 2nd consecutive F5 (in harmony with the enharmonic Gflat in the LH). My two other editions (which I have much less trust for) have neither of the F5s sharped.
Who can help me get to the bottom of this?
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I only have the durand edition, and if it's the place I think you're talking about, the f is first sharp and then natural. e-a-bflat-fsharp-csharp, then eflat-aflat-bdoubleflat-fnatural-c in effect, transposed down a half step. Is this what you're talking about?
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I too have the Durand -- it's the edition I've noticed the peculiar sharp in (it's also the best edition in my opinion).
I don't think we're looking at the same spot -- it's on page 16, last measure of the 2nd line (measure 29), 2nd chord with the lower F sharp (in my printing at any rate).
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There must be more than one Durand edition. My page 16 is the beginning of les collines d'anacaprie.
I cannot for the life of me figure out what f-sharp you're talking about. In my edition measure 29 is the second bar of the en animant.
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There must be more than one Durand edition.
Most likely is. The older copy in my uni library is in two volumes. The one I see in the bookstore now has all 24 Preludes in one volume with a glossy dark blue cover.