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- Performance practice (Music) (4)
- Performance practice (Music)-History-17th century (4)
- Performance practice (Music)-History-18th century (4)
- Performance practice (Music)-History-16th century (3)
- Performance practice (Music)-History-19th century (3)
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- Performance practice (Music)-History-20th century (3)
- Guitar (2)
- Guitar Performance (2)
- Keyboard instrument music (2)
- Keyboard instrument music-Interpretation (Phrasing, dynamics, etc.)-History-Sources (2)
- Mozart, Wolfgang Amadeus, 1756-1791 (2)
- Music-Interpretation (Phrasing, dynamics, etc.) (2)
- Performance Practice (2)
- Performance practice (Music)-History-15th century- (2)
- Renaissance (2)
- Renaissance Music (2)
- Singing (2)
- 19th-20th Century (1)
- Articulation (1)
- Baroque music (1)
- Baroque scoring (1)
- Bass Clarinet (1)
- Basset clarinet (1)
- Basso continuo (1)
- Beethoven, Ludwig van, 1770-1827 (1)
- Composition (Music) (1)
- Continuo Italy (1)
- Don Juan (1)
- Embellishment (Music), Renaissance (1)
- Embellishment Music (1)
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Articles 1 - 23 of 23
Full-Text Articles in Music Practice
Roussel: The Flute And Extramusical Reference, Wendell Dobbs
Roussel: The Flute And Extramusical Reference, Wendell Dobbs
Music Faculty Research
The article Roussel: The Flute and Extramusical Reference reveals the literary side of Roussel's flute music.
Cover/Table Of Contents
Performance Practice Review
Front matter and Table of Contents from the Spring 1997 (10/1) issue of Performance Practice Review.
Authenticity Or Authenticities?--Performance Practice And The Mainstream, Roland Jackson
Authenticity Or Authenticities?--Performance Practice And The Mainstream, Roland Jackson
Performance Practice Review
RILM abstract:"A critique of Peter Kivy's book Authenticities: Philosophical reflections on musical performance (RILM 1995-1431). Kivy proposes that performance involves four authenticities: composer (the composer's original conception), sonic (the restoring of original sound materials), personal (the performer's interpretation), and sensible (the meaning attached by an audience). The first two are furthered by performance practice, the last two by the mainstream. A reconciliation is proposed in that performance practice can encompass personalized Expression and the mainstream can profit from greater awareness of the details of historical performance."
Concerning Articulation On Keyboard Instruments: Aspects From The Renaissance To The Present, Sandra P. Rosenblum
Concerning Articulation On Keyboard Instruments: Aspects From The Renaissance To The Present, Sandra P. Rosenblum
Performance Practice Review
RILM abstract: "The organ, harpsichord, clavichord, and piano have different articulative characteristics due to their actions. An apparent norm of nonlegato playing for secular music existed prior to 1600, with probable playing of notes in ligatures. Signs specific to Articulation began to appear in the 17th c. The articulatory quality of short slurs is discussed, and the persistence of nonlegato into the early 19th c. is illuminated. Changes in the piano and in styles of Articulation went hand in hand in the 19th c. In the 20th c., new signs were added by composers seeking greater specificity of articulative color."
Richard Strauss: The Don Juan Recordings, Raymond Holden
Richard Strauss: The Don Juan Recordings, Raymond Holden
Performance Practice Review
RILM abstract:"Considers the composer-conductor's recordings of his tone poem Don Juan, and charts the genesis of the four commercially released recordings: 1917, 1922, 1929, and 1944. Techniques employed in the recordings are analyzed, and the practices and principles applied by Strauss are discussed in detail. George Szell's involvement in the 1917 recording is considered. Strauss's tempos in the 1922, 1929, and 1944 recordings are compared."
Guitar Performance In The Nineteenth Centuries And Twentieth Centuries, Paul Sparks
Guitar Performance In The Nineteenth Centuries And Twentieth Centuries, Paul Sparks
Performance Practice Review
Sparks discusses the various problems and conventions in guitar Performance through the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
The Guitar And Its Performance From The Fifteenth To Eighteenth Centuries, James Tyler
The Guitar And Its Performance From The Fifteenth To Eighteenth Centuries, James Tyler
Performance Practice Review
RILM abstract:"Discusses the four-course guitar from the 15th to the 17th c., the five-course guitar from the late 16th to the early 18th c., and the six-course guitar from the later 18th c."
"The Keyboard Sonatas Of Joseph Haydn: Instruments And Performance Practice, Genres, And Styles." By László Somfai, Malcolm S. Cole
"The Keyboard Sonatas Of Joseph Haydn: Instruments And Performance Practice, Genres, And Styles." By László Somfai, Malcolm S. Cole
Performance Practice Review
Cole discusses and reviews Somfai's 1995 book.
Cover/Table Of Contents
Performance Practice Review
Front matter and table of contents from the Fall 1997 (10/2) issue of Performance Practice Review.
Tu Ru Or Not Tu Ru: Paired Syllables And Unequal Tonguing Patterns On Woodwinds In The Seventeenth And Eighteenth Centuries, Bruce Haynes
Tu Ru Or Not Tu Ru: Paired Syllables And Unequal Tonguing Patterns On Woodwinds In The Seventeenth And Eighteenth Centuries, Bruce Haynes
Performance Practice Review
RILM abstract:" Original source material on historical tongue-strokes describes "paired syllables", or double-tonguing, as contrasted to single-tonguing. Patterns place the accent on the first, second, or both parts of the pair. Double-tonguing uses a rebound motion to enhance the velocity of Articulation; it reinforces appropriate metrical patterns, but is more often used to achieve speed in extended (and therefore fatiguing) runs of quick notes. Descriptions of double-tonguings began in the early 16th c. and continued to ca. 1827, and were used in Italy, Germany, Holland, France, and England."
"Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Music For Solo Keyboard." Trevor Stephenson, Fortepiano, Marischka Olech-Hopcroft
"Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart: Music For Solo Keyboard." Trevor Stephenson, Fortepiano, Marischka Olech-Hopcroft
Performance Practice Review
Olech-Hopcroft reviews and critiques Stephenson's recording of Mozart Keyboard Music.
Contributors
Performance Practice Review
List of contributors to the Spring 1997 (10/1) issue of Performance Practice Review.
From Ppr To Ppo: New Directions, New Challenges, Roland Jackson
From Ppr To Ppo: New Directions, New Challenges, Roland Jackson
Performance Practice Review
Jackson speaks on the farewell issue of Performance Practice Review and the possible future of the periodical.
Del Suonare Sopra Il Basso: Concerning The Realization Of Early Seventeenth-Century Italian Unfigured Basses, Thérèse De Goede-Klinkhamer
Del Suonare Sopra Il Basso: Concerning The Realization Of Early Seventeenth-Century Italian Unfigured Basses, Thérèse De Goede-Klinkhamer
Performance Practice Review
RILM abstract:"A number of thorough-bass realizations in modern editions of early-17th-c. Italian music are compared with the rules for harmonization, voice leading, musica ficta, and performance practice as laid down in treatises from the same period. Early pieces often should be harmonized differently from how they have been in modern editions. There are also many possibilities such as playing 5-6-5-6 sequences, doubling the bass in octaves, and adding dissonances in certain progressions and allowing false relations, that have hardly been used or have been avoided because they were not thought to be allowable.(Tashiro, Mimi)"
Performing The Medieval Lyric: A Metrical-Accentual Approach, Roger Pensom
Performing The Medieval Lyric: A Metrical-Accentual Approach, Roger Pensom
Performance Practice Review
RILM abstract: Linguistic and metrical accents present many challenges to performers of Old French and Provencal verse. A hypothesis is presented that resolves these problems: If the verse-metrical structure varies from stanza to stanza in the context of a melody that is repeated from stanza to stanza, then the rhythmic structure of the melody changes, paralleling the meter of the verse. Bernart de Ventadorn's Can vei la lauzeta mover is used as an example."
Contributors/End Matter
Performance Practice Review
List of Contributors to the Fall 1997 (10/2) issue of Performance Practice Review.
End matter and advertisements from the Fall 1997 (10/2) issue of Performance Practice Review.
The Timpani And Their Performance (Fifteenth To Twentieth Centuries): An Overview, Edmund Addison Bowles
The Timpani And Their Performance (Fifteenth To Twentieth Centuries): An Overview, Edmund Addison Bowles
Performance Practice Review
RILM abstract: "From the 17th to the early 18th c., timpani performance practice was determined by stock formulas, some of which are seen in Bach's and Handel's orchestral writing. Characteristic written-out patterns only came into use in the late 18th c. In the 19th c., rapid changes of pitch became a challenge, and hand screws and mechanical linkages with tuning levers gave way to the modern pedal timpani. The modern era featured the exploitation of various and unusual tone colors and effects, such as glissando passages, stepwise ascending and descending passages, hitting the center of the drum, using different kinds …
Realizing Partial Signatures Around 1400: Liebert's Credo As A Test Case, Kevin N. Moll
Realizing Partial Signatures Around 1400: Liebert's Credo As A Test Case, Kevin N. Moll
Performance Practice Review
RILM abstract: "A system of realization is used to address the problem of partial signatures in vocal polyphony and the adjustments of accidentals they require. Its principles are applied to the first 18 measures of the Credo of the Mass by Reginaldus Libert. If some latitude in the governing criteria is allowed, it is feasible to realize partial signatures in a systematic manner."
Book Review: "Performing Beethoven." By Robin Stowell, Eva Badura-Skoda, Paul Badura-Skoda
Book Review: "Performing Beethoven." By Robin Stowell, Eva Badura-Skoda, Paul Badura-Skoda
Performance Practice Review
The Badura-Skodas discuss and review Stowell's 1994 book.
Performance Practice And The Falsobordone, Murray C. Bradshaw
Performance Practice And The Falsobordone, Murray C. Bradshaw
Performance Practice Review
RILM abstract: "While the falsobordone was not the most sophisticated genre of the 16th and early 17th c., it was among the most popular. Its popularity can be attributed to its simple polyphonic style, which lent itself to a variety of performances. The falsobordone could be sung by either a full choir or a solo ensemble (with recitations sung in uneven values and without a metrical pulse, but with cadences almost always articulated metrically). It could be performed as a solo song accompanied by organ or another instrument, as a highly embellished solo piece (passaggiato), or as a polychoral composition …
Reading Between The (Ledger) Lines: Performing Mozart's Music For The Basset Clarinet, Robert Adelson
Reading Between The (Ledger) Lines: Performing Mozart's Music For The Basset Clarinet, Robert Adelson
Performance Practice Review
RILM abstract: "The basset horn came into being around 1788. Mozart used it for his concerto K.622 and quintet K.581, and for certain arias in Cosi fan tutte and La clemenza di Tito. Other works of Mozart may have been realized with the basset horn, particularly in performances by Anton Stadler."
Performance Practice Bibliography (1996-1997)
Performance Practice Bibliography (1996-1997)
Performance Practice Review
A bibliography for the field of performance practice from the years 1996-1997.
A Look Backward: Ppr (1988-1997): Resume And Index, Roland Jackson
A Look Backward: Ppr (1988-1997): Resume And Index, Roland Jackson
Performance Practice Review
Jackson is appraising the contribution of PPR.
An index of contributing authors across the history of Performance Practice Review.
A subject index for the histroy of Performance Practice Review.