Rehearing one of my favorite interpretations of the Ninth's final movement, I am reminded of something that has puzzled me since first exposed to the work. It occurs near the beginning, after the celli/bass oratorical soli section, after preceding movements are quoted. The Joy theme makes its appearance, again in the cellos with basses at the octave. Some measures later violas join in, as does a bassoon. Only, I have heared this two different ways. In the recording in question a second bassoon is heard, clearly playing a separate part from the first. The video seems to bear this out, at roughly 4:40.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QDViACDYxnQ
My score shows one bassoon part for this passage, designated with a "1", indicating it is to be played solo (or by the first bassoon section when "monster" orchestras are utilized). A number of my recordings feature only the one scored bassoon part. Others sport the second part.
I believe the second bassoon is playing the double bass line an octave higher. My questions for the learned members of this forum are:
For what it's worth I prefer the two bassoon version, all else being equal.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QDViACDYxnQ
My score shows one bassoon part for this passage, designated with a "1", indicating it is to be played solo (or by the first bassoon section when "monster" orchestras are utilized). A number of my recordings feature only the one scored bassoon part. Others sport the second part.
I believe the second bassoon is playing the double bass line an octave higher. My questions for the learned members of this forum are:
- Are there editions of the Ninth in which a second bassoon part appears in this section of the score?
- Is this, as I tend to suspect, an unscored performance tradition, and if so what is its history?
- Am I full of bologna and hearing things that aren't there?
For what it's worth I prefer the two bassoon version, all else being equal.
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