Dear fellow piano music lovers, students and scholars,
I saddens me to contemplate the DEPLORABLE level of sophistication, maturity, and civility, that the multifarious discussions we have been having about editions show. Something must be done to remedy the rampant chaos, facism, and brutality that the present state of affairs affords us as a group.
To end the madness, let's first choose camps.
1)
Those who believe the monopoly of the truth comes in dark green/gray, has big fat notes on creamy paper, and is is worth mortgaging a small South American country to afford to buy one of the three volumes of the Shubert sonatas (for example), please click above on the Henle bubble.
Should you want to also be known to be a Henle person, post below and state your reasons.
While you do, please also address the discrepancies among the various Urtext editions Henle has published of, say, Beethoven's sonatas.
Also discuss what part of the true text normalizes stems and eliminates the diversity of staccatto marks in Beethoven. Justify rationally the addition of fingerings in situations in which the composer provided none, and make a principled distinction between those editorial enhancements and the addition of dynamic marks in, say, Schirmer's Czerny edition of the Well-Tempered Clavier, or of tempo marks in Schirmer's Kullack edition of Beethoven's concertos. Cap this with an irrefutable exposition of how Czerny, who studied with Beethoven and was the teacher of Liszt, actually is never to be trusted, consulted, or even acknowledged to be an insightful musician with first-hand knowledge about what Beethoven thought of his music and that of others (except for Czerny's op. 299).
2)
Those who do not believe Henle is the Alpha and Omega of textual veracity, but who harbor in their heart a fundamental dislike for Hans von Bulow and Lindworth's notes on the Beethoven sonatas, and perhaps even for Ferrucio Busoni's and more recently Anthony Newman's and Ralph Kirkpatrick's editions of J.S. Bach, please mark bubble 2.
Give yourself extra points if you know how to spell Barenreiter, but are a little disappointed they re-issued Bach's six partitas with editorial enhancements in the form of fingerings. Give yourself more extra points if you understand why the Dover edition of the Beethoven Sonatas is a better scholarly product than the first two Henle editions of the same, and even more points if you can explain the merits, but un-Urtext-ness, of Peter's Urtext under Arrau and Henle's most recent Urtext of the same sonatas with Perahia.
Substract all those points and then some if you are unfamiliar with the work of Dunn, Higgins and Holcman on Chopin's performance practices as to ornamentation. Confess your sins if you do not improvise your candezas when playing Mozart concertos AND sonatas, and consider remedial Urtext Anonymous meetings and textual dependency rehab if you do not know what a lead-in is. Punishment can be commuted for community service by collaborating in the translation of Czerny's Op. 200 (Cortot-like footnote, thank you Dr. Alice Mitchel for having seen this through already. Whomever realizes your work exists and demostrates at least being able to get a copy may have their sentences suspended and no insurance points). If you do believe Ekier was in a materially superior position to discern the best text of Chopin's works than, say, Joseffy and Mikuli and Fontana, please go to jail without passing go and read Michael Kelly, Encyclopedia of Aesthetics (Oxford University Press, 1998, p. 372 (Original from the University of Michigan, Digitized Dec 27, 2006). ISBN 0195126475, 9780195126471.
3) and 4)
If you have read with pleasure 1) and 2), and only identified yourself with the little Barenreiter comment, you may need to consider the lower four bubbles. Let's see: do you have more than one version of the Beethoven sonatas? Even if you don't, have you ever consulted old editions to compare them with the fashionable one of the day? You did know the refences to old editions of the Beethoven concertos and the works of Chopin described in 1 and 2 were in charge of people who actually were very close to the respective composers?
Give yourself extra points if you know what Tecla editions in London sells other than guitar music, and even more points if you play variation 13 of the Goldberg in tempo di giga and not as a Siciliano. You shall be decorated with the Handexemplar prize and will get a free copy of every single book that purports to be urtext and yet it contains absolutely anything that cannot be traced to either and approved early edition, a manuscript, or even better a Handexemplar. You may send them to the Holocaust Museum, as examples of the intellectual arrogance and self-rightgeousness that obliterated the wisdom of Nietzsche's Superman: one beyond good and evil, always capable of loving, forgiving, and embracing those further back in the path to Nirvana. You also get a coupon for Amazon, to get James Grier, The Critical Editing of Music: History, Method, and Practice (Cambridge University Press, 281 p., August 28, 1996) (ISBN-10: 0521558638, ISBN-13: 978-0521558631 (Paperback)).
5)
OK, this is longer than a boa constrictor's fart, so let's fork it. If you are into manuscripts and first editions, help me get started a site devoted to hosting memebr posting of PDFs of great works in manuscript or early editions. Nils gets a palm for his dissemination of the manuscript for Liszt B-Minor Sonata. Thanks Nils. Let's do more and keep it in the silver area for the betterment of humankind/
(PS. Pianostreet Urtext? Really?)
6)
Was all that stuff above hermetic? No clue what to get for your first copy of the Haydn sonatas? A teacher just assigned you Moussorgsky's Pictures at an Exhibition and a Rameau suite and darn it, you at least want to be learning the right text and not that of some incompetent editor (like Rimsky-Korsakoff, who indeed had no idea what Moussorgsky meant). What should an honest, God-fearing folk should be playing, F-Sharp, or A?
Here are some pointers. Please, please, please, if you take exeption with the pointers, do point it out!
Check IMLSP and similar text to see whether you can get an old edition to get started. Then feel free to ask for information on the aesthetic and editorial choices of the various editions available to you. That is a proper question. Please avoid asking which one is better. Hopefully by now you realize the answer is that you should study them both. Learn as much as you can about what good musicians had interpreted the music to mean. Then try to get your hands on an early edition or a copy of a manuscript). The make a choice base not on which one is the true one, but on which one you think is more beautiful.
So, what edition of Ellington's Sophisticated Lady should I get. the one with the fingering added in?