Len Fehskens replies to me:
>>Every little nuance a performer puts in not already part of the score,
>>every micro push and retard of tempo - everything that makes music alive,
>>in short - goes against the doctrine of faithfulness if these expressive
>>devices don't appear in the score
>
>No, because you can't be faithful (or unfaithful) to something that
>isn't there.
Wait a minute. You've told me that you know the composer's intent because
the composer's intent is the score. The additions aren't in the score.
Therefore, you're playing what the composer intended.
>You can, I suppose, presume that the composer was lazy or incompetent
>in failing to notate every nuance, but it is convention that what's not
>spelled out is open to interpretation; indeed, much that *is* spelled
>out is understood to be open to interpretation. But, again by convention,
>there are some things that, once spelled out, are assumed to be unalterable
>-- the (relative) pitches of the notes, the ordering of the notes, the
>ordering of the measures. Some things are subject to interpretation
>withing reasonable bounds -- tempo and dynamics. Gross distortions of
>these are generally recognized as such.
So then what the composer intends is not necessarily identical with the
score. My question becomes how you know what the composer intends. I
Suspect what you're really doing is what most people do - listening to
a performance that either works for you or doesn't.
>So, you don't want to take repeats, don't take them. Fine. But don't
>say this is better because you know what the composer "really" meant.
In fact, I've been saying the opposite. I have no idea what the composer
really meant. For you, this means that you have to cling to the anchor
of a score as much as humanly possible. For me, it means that each
realization must be heard and judged.
Steve Schwartz
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