Originally posted by Kreutzer:
Carlos' father Erich Kleiber also played that passage in the same way. Probably a variant found in an autograph score or set of parts. Being highly regarded conductors, they must have some form of authentification traced back to Beethoven's manuscripts.
[This message has been edited by Kreutzer (edited April 17, 2003).]
Carlos' father Erich Kleiber also played that passage in the same way. Probably a variant found in an autograph score or set of parts. Being highly regarded conductors, they must have some form of authentification traced back to Beethoven's manuscripts.
[This message has been edited by Kreutzer (edited April 17, 2003).]
let's put aside a genius like Beethoven for a brief moment and look at the bigger picture...
We know that until fairly recent times, performers were expected to improvise to some extent. They had cadenzas to create, for one thing. Before Beethoven, I believe (I may be wrong) that markings were less used and the interpreter was somewhat freer to play the way he/she saw fit. Certainly there are relatively few markings in Bach, who also couldn't have cared less in many cases what the particular solo instrument in a given concerto was. Bach's music, judging from its popularity and generally acknowledged profundity, hasn't lost much because of this, except in the case of Rod. Now we have undoubtedly profited much in many cases from having the surer hand of the genius in a well-marked score...
but perhaps we have lost the link between composition and improvising that was common in earlier times and in many other cultures' music also. And we have inherited a split whereby the rock and jazz people do all the improvising and the classical do none, and carefully tend a tradition that is steadily losing new adherents except in its theatrical offshoot, opera. Perhaps classical music would be a current and developing art form instead of a museum if we hadn't had this kind of development away from any real artistic responsibility on the part of the performer, except for interpretation pure and simple.
[This message has been edited by Chaszz (edited April 17, 2003).]
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