Brown, Clive - Classical and Romantic Performing Practice
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  • Brown, Clive - Classical and Romantic Performing Practice

Brown, Clive - Classical and Romantic Performing Practice

Catalogue No: 9780197581612
Product Format Book
Author Clive Brown
Edition Info Hardback
£130.00
Printed on demand, typically dispatched in 3-4 weeks
Pages 1080
Publication Date 12 February 2025
ISBN 9780197581612 (0197581617)

  • Looks beyond the notation to understand how composers might have expected to hear their music realized in performance
  • Evaluates wide-ranging evidence for the fundamental aspects of Classical and Romantic performance
  • Includes abundant musical examples

This book investigates the changing ways in which composers employed notation and musicians understood it between the middle of the eighteenth century and the start of the twentieth century. While explicit notational practices were increasingly the norm throughout this time, many aspects of performance—even as late as the late nineteenth century—were assumed rather than specified and it was still widely understood that much had to be read between the lines. Furthermore, during the
twentieth century the intended implications of many previous notational practices were gradually forgotten and are now generally misunderstood, while others—such as continuous vibrato and the meticulous observance of vertical synchrony and notated rhythms—differ radically from anything the
composer might have envisaged.

Drawing upon early recordings, documentary evidence, and the few surviving mechanical instruments, author Clive Brown investigates how we might rediscover the subliminal messages Classical and Romantic music notation was intended to convey to performers and argues that composers' intentions for their notation ought not to be confused with their expectations for its execution. The use of expressive practices that often involve substantial deviations from a conventional modern reading of the
notation is not only a legitimate but also an essential element in getting closer to the composer's conception. The following topics are investigated over the course of sixteen chapters: metrical and rhetorical accentuation, dynamics, articulation, string-instrument bowing, phrasing, expression, tempo,
tempo flexibility, ornamentation and improvisation, asynchrony, arpeggiation, rhythmic flexibility, sliding effects (portamento), and trembling effects (tremolo, vibrato). The book offers ample evidence to demonstrate that, in many respects, the sound worlds in which Mozart, Beethoven, Wagner, and Brahms created their music were more radically different from ours than is generally assumed.

After it was published in 1999, the first edition of Classical and Romantic Performing Practice 1750-1900 quickly ensconced itself as a must-read for all students, scholars, and performers in historically informed performance. The revised and expanded second edition incorporates new information resulting from the author's continued research and practical experimentation since the publication of the original edition, and has benefitted greatly from his work with a succession of talented
doctoral students over the years.

Contents

  1. Introduction
  2. Accentuation in Theory
  3. Accentuation in Practice
  4. The Notation of Accents and Dynamics
  5. Articulation and Phrasing
  6. Articulation and Expression
  7. The Notation of Articulation and Phrasing
  8. String Bowing
  9. Tempo
  10. Alla Breve
  11. Terms of Tempo and Expression
  12. Tempo Modification
  13. Appoggiaturas, Trills, Turns, and Related Ornaments
  14. Improvised ornamentation and Embellishment
  15. Asynchrony, Arpeggiation, and Flexible Rhythm
  16. Portamento and other sliding effects
  17. Vibrato and other Trembling Effects
  18. Index
9780197581612