Okay as far as I can understand it, ultimately no matter what, we are always and only allowing ourselves a certain freedom and interpreting something as far as we can personally percieve it. I am also not convinced that there is any reason as to
why one person's ideas are inherently
more valuable than another, in and of themselves. Ultimately, there are only
differences between one interpretation from another.
Only when there are certain expectations and/or certain
contexts, can one begin to clarify one's individual and personal beliefs and desires. Even still, it is largely a pesonal perception intertwined with personal limitations, or strengths (btw-- I would gladly like to be intelligently
convinced out of this).
I think what needs to be largely considered here is the context which one is endeavoring within, as well as the intentions behind one's endeavor. Ultimately, it seems to come down to
who or
what one is serving when one decides to pick up a piece.
Is one solely serving one's self? Yes? Then why not play it just the way
one wants to? Ultimately nobody has to listen, or if someone does listen, they don't have to agree and they certainly don't have to enjoy it. So what? Where does that leave anyone?
Is one serving the composer? Yes? Still one can only discern a morsel of what the composer intended, even if the composer is coaching the performer. Furthermore, there are instances where the performer may allow a piece to reach greater musical heights than what the composer himself/herself may have previously fathomed. So what happens then?
Is one serving the music itself? Then what is musicality? Also, musicality does not ulitmately belong to a
somebody more than a
somebody else. Or rather, it belongs to everybody.
Anyway, I think the idea is clear.
So it seems to me that the initial question of this thread is not complete. I think the question has more to do with what it means
to be musical and what it means to actually
be interpreting something in the first place. It seems these questions need to be considered before one decides what "freedoms" one has or has not, as I believe
musicality is the essence of what is being discussed. One also needs to discern
what is actually on the score to work with in the first place, because it may certainly
not be all there is to what even the composer intended.
These questions have begun to be discussed here and I think need to be grappled with first:
https://pianoforum.net/smf/index.php/topic,6853.msg67901.html#msg67901(Questions on musicality and interpretation)
m1469