Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part I Contexts: political, social and cultural
- Part II Profiles of the music
- 3 Bartók's orchestral music and the modern world
- 4 The stage works: portraits of loneliness
- 5 Vocal music: inspiration and ideology
- 6 Piano music: teaching pieces and folksong arrangements
- 7 Piano music: recital repertoire and chamber music
- 8 The Piano Concertos and Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion
- 9 Works for solo violin and the Viola Concerto
- 10 The String Quartets and works for chamber orchestra
- Part III Reception
- Notes
- Select bibliography
- Index
7 - Piano music: recital repertoire and chamber music
from Part II - Profiles of the music
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 September 2011
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part I Contexts: political, social and cultural
- Part II Profiles of the music
- 3 Bartók's orchestral music and the modern world
- 4 The stage works: portraits of loneliness
- 5 Vocal music: inspiration and ideology
- 6 Piano music: teaching pieces and folksong arrangements
- 7 Piano music: recital repertoire and chamber music
- 8 The Piano Concertos and Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion
- 9 Works for solo violin and the Viola Concerto
- 10 The String Quartets and works for chamber orchestra
- Part III Reception
- Notes
- Select bibliography
- Index
Summary
The sin against the spirit of the work always begins with a sin against its letter. . .
igor stravinsky, poetics of musicUnlike Bartók, who had almost nothing to say about his own work, Stravinsky was a man of many words, both philosophical and eminently practical. Had Bartók been minded to expand on the subject of his own music vis-à-vis performance, he too might well have observed that ‘The sin against the spirit of the work always begins with a sin against its letter’, as well as endorsing Stravinsky's remark that ‘An executant's talent lies precisely in his faculty for seeing what is actually in the score …’. But it is at this point that Stravinsky the composer evidently parts company with himself as performer, since he too-often fails, by default, to provide the very information he trusts the talented executant to note. Not so Bartók, for whom intervallic shape and motivic phrasing is a sine qua non for the cut and thrust of his Beethovenian developments. It is not so much that, like Debussy, he expanded the range of classical accentuation according to the needs of his own music, but that he succeeded in devising an articulation precisely appropriate to the needs of each particular piece (see for instance Nine Little Piano Pieces, Nos. 1–4); in other words, the relative weight of phrase and of points within that phrase may be signalled by metre, dynamics, accents and, everywhere, by articulation slurs which define shape and intervallic content. Any properly articulate performance should of course take account of all these punctuating elements.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Bartók , pp. 104 - 117Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001