I was wondering what you would make up to get out of this...
Damn, I was hoping you'd have gotten off the offensive by now.
because we can find you a composer or two around here with a clear vision of his own work...
Not to sound rude, but if a composer here had anywhere close to the "vision" that these geniuses had, they would be world renowned. And if they are, and they can commit to me that their work is based to some sort of real narrative, I'll gladly take up the challenge. Are you yourself willing to admit that you are as gifted as Liszt and Rach were when it comes to applying vision to your work? Be honest with yourself?
and meticulous with all his rests and accents...lol and syncopates passages...
This very well could be the case. May he or she step forward.
by the way I took 2 semesters of notation along with 4 semesters of theory and sight-singing... 98% average. writing "meticulously" marked scores and making them "mind-boggling" is taught in core classes. Much time is devoted to harmonic and structural analysis of great works...what makes them "tick" in a technical sense... and the ways that composers broke the rules of traditional forms. I don't understand why you would want to see the score... how does that help?
I don't care how many classes you took. I JUST finished explaining that you can't teach creativity. I JUST finished explaining that one can be given the tools to perform the task, but the inspiration does not come from a classroom. My challenge above stands, and I'll repeat, are you willing to claim your intellectual prowess to rival those of great composers and poets? Be honest with yourself?
you do realize that MOST editions of these works have additional markings not made by the composer? can you tell the difference?
In my analysis of Un Sospiro, I used two versions. One I got from this site, one I've had for years. The copy provided by this sight had numerous errors, missing accents etc. It was almost a "yeah here are the notes" version. My version has meticulous markings that must be intended by Liszt, because their application is integral to forming the cohesive narrative I produced earlier. It is a tale about a french girl named Lottie, with some attachment at the end "-Do". Someone has a surprise for her.. blah blaw you know the drill. If the markings aren't from Liszt, then there is a genius out there who took a Liszt piece and transformed it into a narrative, and didn't tell anyone, and left Liszt's name on it.
I am a 4th generation piano teacher descendant of Liszt himself through my professor the late Dr. Jack Roberts.. I would like to believe at least some of what I learned at UNT was passed down from the master Liszt himself. there is no way of knowing though really...
Come on now, just because you're now claiming a direct bloodline to Liszt (dubious) that has nothing to do with his offspring's offspring etc.
score 1 for the scientific method.
Responses in bold.
I'd like to make a few more brief points:
I've come to a realization, and I will share part of it, at my dignity's expense, but should it shift your approach to what I'm saying, then it'll be worth it.
Imagine a spectrum, but a vertical one. It's small at the bottom, wide on top, forming a shape identical to an ice cream cone. We have an ice cream cone.
The "ice cream" is the original inspiration for the romantic piece, the idea, the good stuff. Now the cone itself, the "spectrum", inside of it, there is melted ice cream that perfectly fills the cone up until the hard ice cream. So we have an ice cream cone, full of melted ice cream, and ice cream on top.
When we hear music renditions, we are "taking a glance" somewhere inside of that spectrum. Some people's interpretations are "closer" to the "ice cream" than others. What determines this is two things:
1) How well the composer "made his ice cream" ie. creative inspiration, made his vision alive through use of notation, dynamics etc.
2) How well the performer observes the tempo, notation, applies all directions, and creates a "product". The notation and directions are the "ingredients", the performer must take this ingredients and make ice cream. etc.
Over time, our ability to exactly match that "recipe" from the composer diminishes because it becomes more and more "diluted" by "not particularly spectacular" performances, which leads people to lose vision of the real final product. This is exactly why all of my nonsense sounds crazy to most people. To borrow from the analogy once more, I'm trying to point back up to the real recipe, and show us what we're missing out on. I'm sorry if you feel it's not my place to do this.
Please excuse the silly ice cream analogy but it really is a good analogy to what I'm trying to say.
To partially stay on topic to the thread, Rachmaninoff spoke of Horowitz's playing of the Rach 3:
"he swallowed it whole. He had the courage, the intensity, the daring."
Most people read this as "he nailed my vision". I actually don't, I think Rach here is speaking more to Horrowitz's commitment to putting everything he had into the piece. The piece isn't supposed to be something that one just picks up, this is Rach we're talking about.
Now before I finish, Rach also did make a comment along the lines of "this is how I wanted my concerto to sound hear on earth" or something like that. This is such a loaded comment, and I suspect I know what it means. Rach KNEW his 3rd was "hard" to pull off, he figured he would be the only one who could do it "properly", not just get through it, but really capture the "soul" of the music that Rach always talks about. I think the Horrowitz performance surprised him in how close it was, but it still wasn't quite there.
So what has happened? Horrowitz, who I have the utmost respect for, inspired other musicians to attempt it as well. The result? We now have a bunch of Rach 3 renditions that have slowed down to the point of, the real fuedal ferociousness has "diluted", and hard to spot. Horrowitz "made his greatest attempt" at the Rach. 3, and of course his performance was a spectacle, but I still feel Rach chose his words very carefully here. Besides, he was probably one of the greatest and most creative pioneers of "how to express oneself". He wouldn't be lazy on a comment he knew would be in the history books. He and Horrowitz were friends, why would Rach say ANYTHING long the lines of "Well... He worked really hard at it...", which is actually how I translate the above.
My interpretation of Rach's words about Horrowitz may offend some, but I believe the above to be absolutely correct. I'm sorry if "confidence in one's idea" comes off to any of you as "delusional".