There are many works that conductors and composers think need changing. The Schumann symphonies for example have been inundated by changes by different conductors over time. Their reasoning was that Schumann could not composer large-scale works for orchestra, that the piano was always in the back of his mind. Well, recently with the thanks to John Eliot Gardiner who claims, and I believe him to be right, that the large orchestras of today, with the doubling of sections is not, nor has it ever been conducive to Schumann's orchestral works. He, Gardiner took the approch of doing the symhonies with an orchestra of the size Schumann would have used. A quote by Gardiner states that conductors like Mahler and Weingartner "Didn't seem to have occured to them that what they saw as grave problems of imbalance in Schumann's symphonic writing had far more to do with the increased size and expanded sonority of their own late 19th century orchestras than with any ineptitude on Schumann's part". Some of the symphonies of Schubert have also undergone changes by no less a composer than Johannes Brahms. I would be lead to beleive that the same reasoning lay with Brahms changes in Schubert's works.
The conclusion to all of this is that I for one want to hear the music the way the composer composed it, no changes by other composers or conductors. We wouldn't change the smile on the Mona Lisa or the finale chapter of a Shakespeare work. Let's hear it the way it was composed. Who realy can say that the composer didn't want his or her music performed the way it was composed?
Can you hear me John Cage?
[This message has been edited by King Stephen (edited April 01, 2004).]
The conclusion to all of this is that I for one want to hear the music the way the composer composed it, no changes by other composers or conductors. We wouldn't change the smile on the Mona Lisa or the finale chapter of a Shakespeare work. Let's hear it the way it was composed. Who realy can say that the composer didn't want his or her music performed the way it was composed?
Can you hear me John Cage?
[This message has been edited by King Stephen (edited April 01, 2004).]
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