9 - From score to sound
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
Summary
Many performers refer to scores as ‘the music’. This is wrong, of course. Scores set down musical information, some of it exact, some of it approximate, together with indications of how this information may be interpreted. But the music itself is something imagined, first by the composer, then in partnership wth the performer, and ultimately communicated in sound.
The moment when music as sound is born, along with the attendant joys and frustrations, has been beautifully described by the great accompanist Gerald Moore. In the passage that follows, Moore subjects to microscopic analysis the introductory bars, or Vorspiel, of Schubert's ‘Wandrers Nachtlied’ (see Example 9.1). Moore's choice of such an ‘easy’ song is revealing, emphasising that technique is not simply a matter of accurately reproducing the score – in this instance the notes are simple enough to read at sight – but one of bringing the score to life in sound. Moore takes a delight in showing how elusive this can be:
Dynamically this little Vorspiel is all pianissimo but within the bounds of that pianissimo there must be a slight increase or swelling of tone and a subsequent reduction of tone. It is a curve – rising then falling; the smoothest of curves with one chord joined to the next. So restricted in range is it, so narrow the margin between your softest chord and your least soft chord that if you go one fraction over the limit at the top of the curve all is ruined. Each chord though related and joined to its neighbour is a different weight, differing by no more than a feather. […]
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- Information
- Musical PerformanceA Guide to Understanding, pp. 129 - 143Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002
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