Originally posted by Chaszz:
1. If one instrument were a tuba and the other a fortepiano then I might see the logic of this argument. When the second instrument is fairly closely related to the first, since it is in fact its descendent, I think that people who have learnt to play one are at least as qualified to comment on a performance on the other, as a listener who has learnt to play neither.
2. I wonder why it so hard to get people to comment here since you have always declared that proper period performances would prove themselves manifestly superior as soon as listened to.
3. Were we not impartial colleagues here, met in a disinterested spirit dedicated only to truth and not personal advantage, I might imagine that you were implying that I cannot tell the difference between a tuned and untuned piano. However, since this is not possible, I have banished the thought from my mind.
Originally posted by Rod:
If these 'pianists' you are seeking have no experience of the fortepiano then I fail to see how their input in particular can offer any further insight. It is hard enough to get people to comment here as it is with restricting the discussion further to just pianists! PS the piano is in tune, perhaps it is Serkin's that isn't?
If these 'pianists' you are seeking have no experience of the fortepiano then I fail to see how their input in particular can offer any further insight. It is hard enough to get people to comment here as it is with restricting the discussion further to just pianists! PS the piano is in tune, perhaps it is Serkin's that isn't?
2. I wonder why it so hard to get people to comment here since you have always declared that proper period performances would prove themselves manifestly superior as soon as listened to.
3. Were we not impartial colleagues here, met in a disinterested spirit dedicated only to truth and not personal advantage, I might imagine that you were implying that I cannot tell the difference between a tuned and untuned piano. However, since this is not possible, I have banished the thought from my mind.
2. not the performances, but the instruments will be proved the best suited to the music. The performances themselves are of secondary importance here, even if they are very good as a lot of them are in my opinion.
3. The modern piano is in any case almost always tuned in a manner that Beethoven would not have experienced in his lifetime.
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"If I were but of noble birth..." - Rod Corkin
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