Anybody want to look through from K330 backwards (urtext of course) and corroborate this?
The whole point of using first editions (on what urtext is partly based) is the supposition, and usual practice, that the composer approved the plates before printing. Are you saying Artaria just went ahead and printed any old thing? You have evidence for this?
I have no evidence, because I am generally not very interested in it where art is concerned. Logic dictates that a composer like Mozart would never indicate something that could not be done on the instruments he wrote for. I can imagine that Mozart himself randomly added (or approved of adding) something later on, when the touch-sensitive fortepianos became available.A book like John Irving's "Mozart's Piano Sonatas: Contexts, Sources, Style" could give you some more info on the subject.
I really don't know what you're trying to say.
Could you do me a favour and leaf through pre-K330 to see if I missed anything? If you have Irving's book maybe have a look in there for mf pre-K330? Thanks.
edit: thanks for the link! Actually as it turns out he lives not far from me - I'll go to his K271 concert next month.
I've played on a piano, with escapement, made before this sonata was published. I'm also well aware of what an early piano (not to mention clavichord) can do.
P.S.: If in doubt, ask Mr. Irving.
Well, I'm sitting here in the library staring at his book.
Please read:Preface page xii, starting from "Some performance issues...". Footnote 8 will refer you to chapter 3.
edit: read through some of Understanding - he lists the dynamics in K330 but doesn't comment much; certainly not on the mf which I think may be Mozart's first use of it in a solo piano work. Prove me wrong someone, PLEASE!
We see the same symptoms there: nothing but "p" and "f".
I wager his f was not as f as our modern f.
Why would anyone have to prove you wrong?
So I can put my theory to bed!
As long as one doesn't limit oneself and others in the present, one is free to believe whatever one thinks is "right" about the past. Since we don't have a time machine, any theory (including Irving's) can be nothing more than speculation.
Not entirely. Whilst we can't travel to the past, some of the past has managed to travel to us. Any theory must be at least consistent with the evidence that we do have. And some theories are more convincing than others even if both have passed that test.
Musicologists simply tend to go too far sometimes