Hi guys,
sorry for the late reply
. I do realise that ravel uses A in place of g sharp many times because at that low pitch its not possible to differentiate between the two notes. and yes i know it happens in jeux d'eau right after the glissando and a couple of more times.
In this piece however, une barque sur la ocean , ther is a g sharp note below the lowest A. however it is not at the place most of you are thinking
Is the G# a 16th note preceded by an A 16th note? The A is marked to be an octave lower than written (so it would be the lowest note on the keyboard) but the marking is lifted before the G#. (I have the Eschig/Durand score)
I know which place you are talking about. I do realise the marking has been lifted before the g sharp .
It is the place with a tremolo on a G# minor chord, right? Also in my edition is written A, then G# an octave higher.
I find this very interesting, because the bass note should obviously be a G# (ideally), because the harmony is a simple G# minor chord. But Ravel uses the lowest A, knowing that in the context it will be heard as a bass note for the G# chord. It is in such a low register that it is not possible for the listener to hear that it is actually a wrong note.
There is a similar place in "Jeux d'eau", also an A substituting a G#.
There exists pianos with an extended range, where it would be possible to play the G#. Maybe in some editions the low G# is actually written, although on normal pianos it is not possible to play?
Again you are referring to the same place which is bar no.39 i believe ( unless i counted wrong) . That is fine.
the place i am talking about is the bass note right before the glissando in bar no.44 i think.. in there there is a g sharp below the lowest A followed by a g sharp an octave higher and another g sharp an octave higher than the previous.
I d like you guys to check that bar and tell me whats going on?
and if it really is a g sharp , then i dont understand why would he substitue an A for a g sharp at some places and not here?