Yes, his playing IS truly mediocre. Actually, this following example is excruciatingly poor for a purportedly professional musician - unexpressive, bizarre rubati, etc
Er, yeh, granted. I was truly astonished to hear him play the Mozart on clavichord, which to me was deeply moving and timed to perfection, with stunning trills and sensitive rubato, but his piano playing seems pretty dire, I have to admit. Thanks.
He also cherrypicks quotes about tempi of the time. We have actual recorded concert timings from the 19th century (George Smart et al) which do not support any argument that tempi have changed appreciably.
Bearing in mind I'm just exploring the subject and know very little about the history of music, I was allowing vaguely in the back of my mind for the possibility that there was a relatively sudden shift in playing styles (increasing tempo generally) before such time as recording technologies came in, perhaps with the fairly sudden boom in the middle class urban population. In other words, I thought this might reasonably be true of baroque composers, then a shift with the Industrial Revolution to a more virtuosic competitive playing. But I accept this may be fanciful.
He deletes and shadow bans people from his channel when such information is brought up.
Well, while not a definitive argument against someone's hypothesis, that certainly doesn't look good.
We also have historical recordings from the generation of Liszt pupils, and of Saint-Saens <snip>
Yeah. And I was all ready to consider that early recordings might be speeded up - Charlie Chaplin walked damn fast - but it seems to be in key, which it would not be if speeded up. Again, this would require the "industrial" shift to a suddenly mad approach to new composition and a sort of accidental, projected shift in the playing of early music. It does look increasingly unlikely, and I imagine 15th Century lutenists' fingers were as agile, and their musical ear as discriminating, as five centuries later.
What we don't have are any serious accounts which say "virtuoso x set a trend by playing Chopin / Liszt / Beethoven twice as fast as they themselves did"..
Again, I think the hypothesis doesn't indicate that everything was played at half the speed, because it asserts that generally people don't/didn't approach the indicated tempo,
because that was always double the intended tempo of the composer. He makes that quite clear, that when you slow down, you don't play at half the usual pace, because "nobody" (generally) plays it at the double speed anyway. I keep seeing this mistaken "debunking", like people saying that a concert billed at 4 hours would have taken 8.
Again, I can't judge these issues, since I don't know how often players/orchestras play at under the indicated tempo, nor by how much. However, he cites some evidence (I forget what) that this is often, or on average, between 30% and 70% of the indicated tempo (however, this undermines the "it's not half the speed" argument, since 50% is exactly that!).
Nobody, I think, is arguing that he can't just play pieces slowly if he believes they sound better that way. What we are taking issue with is his dogma that this is how they were played.
Sure. Thanks. And I have to say I was partly interested in this because I do very often like music played slower than it is normally performed. My own (possibly whacko) hypothesis is that as we learn pieces, there is a natural tendency to play them faster than "optimum" (by which I mean, taking all into account, musicality, which is obviously also subjective), and hence, as composers write pieces, I imagine there is often the same tendency, to write something slowly, enjoying the dissonances, working out the cadences, then gradually forget the expressive qualities they discover as the piece unfolds and they gradually speed up. Obviously, some composers will imagine a fast tempo in the first instance, when this wouldn't apply.
I have noticed this tendency a lot in my own composition, however (much of which is on guitar). I'll work out chord changes and fingering very slowly (just as I do when learning someone else's piece) and then, as I get "better" at playing it, I'll get a kick out of the pace of it and my apparent increase in musicianship, sometimes switching to a different instrument because that allows the faster tempo to work. Then, sometimes years later, when I've half forgotten it, I rediscover the tempo I intended, and all the richness of the original expression comes back to me too.
So my "theory" is that a lot of music, by the time it's published, is faster than optimal, and even the composer doesn't realise it. Often we forget that there is great musicianship required in playing something slowly; it seems obvious that it's going to be easier because it's slower.
But yeah, that's not about the dogma, it just added to my interest in the hypothesis.