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Which of these types of performances would you rather hear?

Perfect technique, strict adherence to score markings, just letting the music speak for itself
10 (32.3%)
Imperfect technique, poetic license with score markings, drama and emotion placed above all else
21 (67.7%)

Total Members Voted: 31

Topic: What type of playing do you like the best?  (Read 2328 times)

Offline thalberg

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What type of playing do you like the best?
on: July 09, 2007, 06:36:11 PM
Discussions welcome.

Offline ramseytheii

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Re: What type of playing do you like the best?
Reply #1 on: July 09, 2007, 07:00:02 PM
You have given us two false opposites.  Why should not the markings in a score indicate drama and emotion to be above everything else?

Walter Ramsey

Offline counterpoint

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Re: What type of playing do you like the best?
Reply #2 on: July 09, 2007, 07:14:09 PM
Why perfect technique vs imperfect technique?

Technique should be as perfect as possible, but perfect technique alone ist not enough. Just playing what is written in the score is not enough either.
If it doesn't work - try something different!

Offline nicco

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Re: What type of playing do you like the best?
Reply #3 on: July 09, 2007, 08:06:17 PM
This is a Horowitz vs Hamelin question.
"Without music, life would be a mistake." - Friedrich Nietzsche

Offline ted

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Re: What type of playing do you like the best?
Reply #4 on: July 09, 2007, 09:23:43 PM
Answering the poll as it is would force me to choose between two unsatisfactory states. Music is my primary interest, of course, with appropriate and sufficient physical technique to express it. I can tolerate a good many physical faults in somebody's playing provided they do not seriously detract from the musical result. On the other hand, no amount of finger dexterity can compensate for a vacuous musical effect.

Couched in that negative way, the question is easy to answer. I can ignore physical incompetence to a much greater degree than I can ignore unsatisfactory sound.
"Mistakes are the portals of discovery." - James Joyce

Offline thalberg

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Re: What type of playing do you like the best?
Reply #5 on: July 09, 2007, 09:37:56 PM
Why should not the markings in a score indicate drama and emotion to be above everything else?

Walter Ramsey


Well, in Bach for instance, not much is written in the score.

In Beethoven, have you seen the Schnabel edition?  He takes great license, even indicating tempo changes within movements.

In Perahia's rendition of the Wanderer Fantasie, he is completely faithful to the score, but he also takes liberties.  Listen to his 3rd movement.  Sometimes you can match the metronome at 66 to the dotted quarter, sometimes it goes as high as 80.

My point is that some people feel freer than others to do something that is not written.  I have even seen people go against specified things, like articulations or even dynamics.

Offline thalberg

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Re: What type of playing do you like the best?
Reply #6 on: July 09, 2007, 09:40:37 PM
Also, I was not wanting to indicate that these two ways of playing are opposite.  They are not opposite.  I was just presenting two sort of imaginary people and asking which one you'd want to hear.

Offline rc

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Re: What type of playing do you like the best?
Reply #7 on: July 09, 2007, 10:25:57 PM
Probably the one who's taking more liberties...  It would likely be an indication of their own creative imagination, and so a more natural expression, more likely to 'breathe'.

Though there's a line where I think if a pianist is completely changing the composition, that they should be writing their own music rather than calling it 'Mozart'.

Offline ramseytheii

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Re: What type of playing do you like the best?
Reply #8 on: July 10, 2007, 01:23:00 AM
Well, in Bach for instance, not much is written in the score.

Of course, that means that it is impossible to take liberties.   ;D  By which I mean, there is nothing to be liberated from.


Quote
In Beethoven, have you seen the Schnabel edition?  He takes great license, even indicating tempo changes within movements.

It is true that Schnabel adds a great deal of interpretation into his editions, but you will also find that he never cancels out anything Beethoven originally marked, in other words, the liberties are not from a lack of strictness in score-reading.  A poetic and dramatic performance can and does include both fully what is notated in the score, and the extra part that is impossible to be notated.

Quote
In Perahia's rendition of the Wanderer Fantasie, he is completely faithful to the score, but he also takes liberties.  Listen to his 3rd movement.  Sometimes you can match the metronome at 66 to the dotted quarter, sometimes it goes as high as 80.

Right!  So he fits into neither of your categories.

Quote
My point is that some people feel freer than others to do something that is not written.  I have even seen people go against specified things, like articulations or even dynamics.

Well, it was phrased in a confusing way originally, in that case.  Perhaps it would be better to pose the question, "Is it better that someone just plays what is in the score, no more, no less, or that someone plays what is in the score, plus some?"

Walter Ramsey

Offline thalberg

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Re: What type of playing do you like the best?
Reply #9 on: July 10, 2007, 01:58:22 AM
Well, it was phrased in a confusing way originally, in that case.  Perhaps it would be better to pose the question, "Is it better that someone just plays what is in the score, no more, no less, or that someone plays what is in the score, plus some?"

Walter Ramsey


Well perhaps I could rephrase it.  Honestly, I was thinking of particular people whom I know personally when I originally phrased the question.  That's where the criteria come from. Your assessment is correct, though.

Offline prongated

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Re: What type of playing do you like the best?
Reply #10 on: July 10, 2007, 03:13:24 AM
This is a Horowitz vs Hamelin question.

...eh? You think Horowitz's technique was shonky?? In any case, it sounds more like Brendel VS Rubinstein to me...

There's a story when Brendel was quite excited of a release of Gilels' Beethoven Sonata recording. He listened to it intently until Gilels deviated slightly from Beethoven's score marking...at which moment Brendel stopped the recording - apparently it 'ruined' the whole performance...

Anyway, I'd generally take Rubinstein over Brendel any day.

Offline daniloperusina

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Re: What type of playing do you like the best?
Reply #11 on: July 14, 2007, 12:56:07 AM
In any case, it sounds more like Brendel VS Rubinstein to me...

...eh? You think Rubinstein's technique was shonky??  ;)

But sincerely, maybe Thalberg's point is that we live in a high-tech, un-poetic and un-artistic era. A true 'voice' in a pianist's fingers has been substituted for a sports-like chase of easy-to-grasp matters, of which perhaps speed and clarity are predominant. And not hitting wrong notes...
And true 'interpretation' has been substituted for a misguided literal view of the score.

What is the most frequently heard comment after a concert? "I didn't hear a single wrong note!"

In the book "Conversations with Arrau" he talks about Berlin in the 1910's. He says wrong notes were considered signs of genius, and the note-perfect pianist's were often dismissed as uninteresting, as it often implied that they were not very expressive. But today the wrong-player hasn't a chance to survive.

Both Brendel and Schnabel have commented on how not everything should be heard clearly, some passages that simply must be obscured. And how Brendel has been fighting a loosing war with sound-technicians' obsession about clarity in recordings.

Maybe this isn't Thalberg's point at all.
In any case, I'd likely look for my profound musical experiences in the second category. Which wouldn't exclude that they could happen in the first.

Offline prongated

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Re: What type of playing do you like the best?
Reply #12 on: July 14, 2007, 02:57:42 AM
...eh? You think Rubinstein's technique was shonky??  ;)

...hahaha...actually no, that's what Rubinstein himself thought of his technique :P

Offline daniloperusina

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Re: What type of playing do you like the best?
Reply #13 on: July 14, 2007, 03:11:27 AM
"Any student who plays even a half-descent Scarlatti makes me think he's a better pianist than me" -A Rubinstein  :o

Or something like that...

Offline Bob

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Re: What type of playing do you like the best?
Reply #14 on: July 14, 2007, 03:41:49 AM
I'd go for playing it authentically and according to the the composer's wishes.  If it meant to be expressive, then I'd want expression.
Favorite new teacher quote -- "You found the only possible wrong answer."

Offline invictious

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Re: What type of playing do you like the best?
Reply #15 on: July 14, 2007, 04:15:20 AM
I'd go for my personal interpretation
and you should go for your own personal interpretation.
Bach - Partita No.2
Scriabin - Etude 8/12
Debussy - L'isle Joyeuse
Liszt - Un Sospiro

Goal:
Prokofiev - Toccata

>LISTEN<

Offline cmg

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Re: What type of playing do you like the best?
Reply #16 on: July 16, 2007, 08:55:14 PM
I'd just go out for a beer.
Current repertoire:  "Come to Jesus" (in whole-notes)

Offline forester

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Re: What type of playing do you like the best?
Reply #17 on: August 20, 2007, 04:56:45 AM
This question is like one of those Zen riddles.
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