Marik, I will urge you toward an encore, in this case, and perhaps several more after that

... hee hee.
So, what is the relation, exactly (between your motions and the music)?
Actually, I am glad that you have asked this, henry, because it is exactly where my thoughts are at. Actually, it has been my biggest question in this thread, but it took me some digging to get to it and I felt I had to lay some ground work first.
So, my question in response is (and I think it is indeed the heart of the matter), how is
any motion related to the music ? This is a particular area in this discussion that I am unclear about in general (and would like a better understanding of in general), and that is why I first addressed Walter's post regarding the thought that "the least movement, the better" -- with that I don't fully agree (or I feel it can be very misleading) because it really depends on many factors.
Yes, I see that the motions must be connected to the music, but they must also be connected to us individually -- which means that there are loads more factors to be taken into consideration. And, which comes first ? I know that some people think the music/sound should come first, and our personal comfort second -- but, once again, this is not a perfect concept in my opinion. They must come together, it seems.
I think that what marik was talking about regarding "intonatsia" is one of the only ways to address the concept of how our motions are related to the music, and therefore I feel the need to spend a moment in one particular post of his. I would like to start with this :
Doesn't it prove Neuhaus' words: "Everything written in the music--just read it carefully"!!! I think this is the key for understanding this passage and once one understands it, any fingering will work. I'd suggest at least to try the following:
F# B E B E F# E F# B F#
2 1 3 1 2 3 2 3 1 3
(argh... I am sitting here minutes after minutes in frustration, not knowing how to ask my questions ... )
Okay. I have to just go with where I am at in the moment. First of all, I think sometimes too much credit is given to a composer. By all means, they certainly deserve credit for their contributions to the world, but, that is exactly what they are doing when they decide to put music down on paper -- they are giving it to the world. To some extent, they are releasing a certain amount of control over what the piece becomes, since it is now literally in the hands and ears of each individual, and we are all different in so many ways. I have, constantly, at the root of myself, the example of Horowitz playing Rach's 2nd piano sonata, and Rach (supposedly) calling it Horowitz's after a certain point. He conceded that Horowitz played it better than himself, and even understood it better than himself -- now, I am not claiming to be Horowitz ... hee hee, but the point is that the individual performer does play a big role in the music itself, no matter who composed it.
Secondly, what other "logical" fingering/motions would
typically be thought of for this particular passage that I have brought up in this thread ? Honestly, under a certain mindframe, I myself cannot think of any at all -- it seems, under this same mindframe, there is actually only one option, and that being what was originally written in my score : 235 123 1235.
My impression of the original fingering/motions is that it was made under the idea of what our hands
normally do -- or have generally been
taught to do within certain schools of thought. For example, I believe Hanon was used and taught in the Moscow Conservatory (where (or at least with what particular influence) Rachmaninov spent many of his years as an impressionable pianist and musician), as well as Czerny. In Hanon, the idea of isolating our fingers as the means of piano playing is represented. In Czerny the idea of keeping our fingers always in parallel with the keys is represented, and with those fingerings (like all fingerings) comes particular motions.
My suggested fingering completely does not fit into any of these mindframes that I have metioned :
1. The less movement, the better.
2. Hanon : Isolating finger movements to play the piano.
3. Czerny : Keeping fingers parallel to the keys
Therefore, to the mindframe who thinks in these manners, my suggested fingering will be completely illogical -- I recognize this fully. However, the mindframes that I have mentioned up above are, in my opinion, nearly completely false and incredibly misguided approaches to playing the piano -- if taken as a form of religious practice when it comes to our physical approach -- in short, it becomes dogma that winds up limiting most people whom are too afraid to think outside of those boxes.
So, what we are discussing,
really, is a passage whose makeup has many facets to it -- of which are not necessarily all purely musical -- per se. I realize that this is some rather big stuff that I am talking about, but these are actually the precise questions that I have in my guts about ... well... everything ... hee hee.
Getting back to the music, though, and what I have quoted from Marik. I can't help but ask now, given what I have mentioned, what really are Rachmaninov's intentions ? I just don't think we *really* would know since there is so much static in the way. I think this needs to be considered, though, but many things have to be taken into consideration along those lines.
I think that the music itself can tell us what its own intention is (which is why I happen to be very interested in theory). Musically speaking, the intervals, and the distances between them, cannot be disputed (how this will affect our individual hands and what Rachmaninov was thinking about that particular thing CAN be and ARE disputed ad nauseum -- and I think there are no clear, sure answers there).
Musically speaking, I think these intervals and the distance between them creates its very own impression, and I think that is precisely what needs to be taken into consideration first -- not necessarily what was layed out as the physical approach to these musical concepts by one person (whether they be editor or composer or pianist or a squirrel or whomever). And, that is the only way a passage's musical affect could be achieved in more than one
physical way.
So, yes, I will consider the intervals, but to understand them MUSICALLY I will consider them first without thinking about what I have to do to physically reach them. Did I do this sufficiently in my initial recording of this passage, posted in the very first post ? No, I sure didn't. At that time, I was wrestling mainly with the fact that I wasn't satisfied with what I had been doing for YEARS !!!! But, thankfully, there is still time

.
Now, I have to take a break for a moment ... hee hee.