Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- TRANSLATOR'S INTRODUCTION
- THE TRANSLATION
- Epistle
- On the subject of harpsichord tuning
- Treatise on the tuning of the Harpsichord
- Procedure for tuning the harpsichord properly
- How the Harpsichord and the Prestant of the Organ should be tuned
- Advice to choirmasters and organists
- On the quantity and diversity of sounds
- The eight tons of the church
- Treatise on fugues, and how they should be realized [I]
- Treatise on fugues, and how they should be realized [II]
- The proper manner of playing the harpsichord and the organ
- On bad habits that occur among those who play instruments
- Appendix A A comparison of parallel passages from the published writings of Jean Denis and Marin Mersenne
- Appendix B A transcription of the ‘Prelude for determining whether the tuning is good throughout’
- Bibliography
- Index
The proper manner of playing the harpsichord and the organ
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 December 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- TRANSLATOR'S INTRODUCTION
- THE TRANSLATION
- Epistle
- On the subject of harpsichord tuning
- Treatise on the tuning of the Harpsichord
- Procedure for tuning the harpsichord properly
- How the Harpsichord and the Prestant of the Organ should be tuned
- Advice to choirmasters and organists
- On the quantity and diversity of sounds
- The eight tons of the church
- Treatise on fugues, and how they should be realized [I]
- Treatise on fugues, and how they should be realized [II]
- The proper manner of playing the harpsichord and the organ
- On bad habits that occur among those who play instruments
- Appendix A A comparison of parallel passages from the published writings of Jean Denis and Marin Mersenne
- Appendix B A transcription of the ‘Prelude for determining whether the tuning is good throughout’
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
A philosopher used to tell his disciples that he was like the whetstone, which does not cut, but makes cutting possible; one might say the same thing about me. It could be said, ‘He wishes to teach, which he should not do, for there are others who are better prepared to undertake this than he, and who play the harpsichord far better than he’. Yet it does not follow that since I do not play as well [as they], that I therefore cannot clearly explain how to play correctly, or prescribe proper hand position, which is the foundation of good playing. For I am well aware that there are those who play better than I, but they are few in number, and they do not wish to trouble themselves with writing.
There are some masters who have their pupils place their hands in such a way that the wrist is lower than the hand, which is very bad, and properly speaking, a vice, because the hand no longer possesses strength. Others make one hold the wrist higher than the hand, which is a fault because the fingers then resemble sticks, straight and stiff. For the proper position of the hand, the wrist and the hand must be at the same height; in other words, the wrist must be at the same height as the large knuckle of the fingers.
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- Treatise on Harpsichord Tuning , pp. 97 - 100Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1987