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The Art of Clavier Playing, Past and Present

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2020

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Extract

Clavier playing with the fingers can scarcely have been practised before the middle of the fourteenth century. At the period referred to organ keys varied in width from three inches to six inches; the organ-player was therefore sometimes very accurately called a striker, his method of playing requiring either a stroke with closed fingers or a decided pressure with the whole of the fingers extended; we can see a pictorial representation of the latter method in the “Theorica Musica,” by Gaffurius, published in Milan in 1492.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Musical Association, 1893

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References

Prætorius's dictum was curiously obeyed when Mozart demonstrated to Haydn the use of the nose.Google Scholar

These were published by Sadler of Liverpool, who also issued an edition in 1754.Google Scholar