personally, i find this quite useless.
I would ask "What is possible?" What are all the different things I might learn about a piece? Then I can decide what things I want to learn from a very complete list of possibilities.I would agree it's very individual. How a person learns would have an impact. It might be very important for one person to be able to see each part of the score in their mind, while another might want to be able to imagine their hands moving.And practical -- how much time will you spend? If it's for a performance, how important is the performance? If you really wanted to go nuts -- why not learn to improvise a fugue? That would certainly help your performance of a fugue, wouldn't it? Or write a fugue yourself in the style of Bach? I suppose you just have to set your own goals and limits.
I am not certain myself, but my general attitude at times is, 'one will not regret having taken as many preparatory steps as possible in learning a piece, however, one will indeed regret having not taken sufficient preparatory steps.'
I suppose the question then is, what is sufficient (as Bob is maybe talking about)?
I guess it is highly individual.
I actually like the idea but one problem comes up for me: a fugue that has more than 2 voices requires the performer to play the third (and fourth if there is one) voices with the available fingers of both hands as is feasible. And these voices may shift from one hand to another as the piece progresses. If one were to memorize individual voices would that be a hindrance to the performance memorization? In other words, one would play it differently with different fingerings, etc. when playing the voices alone versus playing all of them together as a complete performance.
By the way m1469, this as well as all your other topics are very interesting and get me to thinking! Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
How about how the voices interact? All the intervals between each voice combinations, the counterpoint rules, etc....or the "process" of a fugue. Here's the subject and you expect the answer a certain way. Does that happen? What happens after that? I guess, what expecataions are set up in the piece? Are those fulfilled?
Yeah, okay, I think I'll go nuts... lol . I just went and tried to improvise a fugue... I think I still have ways to go . Has anyone done this? Don't be a closet fugue-improviser, share with "us" hungry spirits (me and my alter ego, and whomever else is interested). You will give us some pointers... ?Thanks a lot for your inputs.m1469
I think you should listen to some of Keith Jarretts soloimprovisations on piano. While he doesn't strictly improvise fugues, his playing is very contrapunctal and since he loves Bach and other baroque music, his improvisations are sometimes very baroque-sounding. Listen to the beginning of his "Paris concert" for instance - it sounds like something Bach could have written, yet this is improvised music from a concert in 1988. I saw Jarret live last year in Rome, which was a wonderful experience. In one of the pieces, he began playing something atonal but after 7 minutes or so the music started transforming from atonality to tonality, and all of a sudden he was playing some kind of two-part invention instead - somehow the piece sounded very baroque from that point and on, but still the harmonies he was using were very jazzy, with colourings (is that the right word?) that I'm sure Bach never even thought existed. Still, the piece sounded very much like something Bach could have played.Perhaps I'll post it for you But as I said, I think you should listen to many of Jarretts solo concerts. They are always fantastic, and often very contrapunctal. Although he always knows how to bring out one voice while keeping the other voices in the background. I think that his contrapunctal playing has become better as he grows older, so the later concerts are usually better on that aspect - not to say that the old ones are bad. There's a great part in the famous "Köln concert" (in Part 2a), after a long part where he just jams on two chords, which is contrapunctal, with one voice in the right hand, and one voice answering in the left. Check it out!
Perhaps I'll post it for you
The ability to sight-read the fugue is also of much benefit. You do not get practice of sightreading if you take the voices out before learning it. Sightread first, develop contrapuntal thinking afterwards.
If you really wanted to go nuts -- why not learn to improvise a fugue?