So I've been recently interested in the various "complete editions" of various composers out there. It started I suppose with my purchase of the
Chopin National Edition version of the Nocturnes. I was hesitant at first, cuz I had the pieces from Dover and the cost was pretty steep by comparison. But, hell, this month is my birthday, so why not?
I must say, I was quite pleasantly surprised by the quality of the edition: the location and extent of the performance commentary, a discussion of the various previous editions and manuscripts of the pieces, even some primary sources discussing the works. All-in-all, I'd say it was worth the buck, and I plan on getting the entire catalog one day (gradually, of course)
so after this, I became incredibly interested in the other "complete editions" of composers such as Mozart, Bach, Beethoven, etc. Much to my dismay, the prices on these were unimaginably higher then what I'd seen with Chopin. For example, Book one of the WTC from Baerenreiter's "Neue Bach-Ausgabe" is a whopping
$191.16 (and the critical commentary is published seperately and listed as
$215.16). This is especially surprising since the normal Barenreiter copy is only
$23.96(to site another example: here is G. Henle Verlag's catalog of the
Beethoven Complete Edition)
So, what is it that seperates the "complete edition" from the normal publications of the work? I would understand if the critical commentary were published with the playing score, but it seems strange that a publishing company would publish JUST THE SCORE at such a higher price then the non-complete edition copy of the same score. I'm thoroughly confused on this, and would love it if someone could enlighten me.
Besides this, do you guys believe the "complete editions" out there are worth it? If so, why? if not, why not?