Once
Again, This Time with Feeling
by Stephen Davies
The arbitrariness of so many
virtuosos is partly responsible for the excess of expression marks to
be found in the works of composers who thus hoped to forestall distortion
and misinterpretation. Yet, complete control over the performer is not
only impossible but also undesirable. The only remedy is to improve the
education of performers in matters of musical style and taste. The most
common fault is the application of a Romantic, that is, a highly expressive
treatment of non-Romantic music, such as the works of Bach, Mozart, Beethoven.
The deplorable result is an overdoing of all nuances: the use of prestissimo
instead of allegro, of larghissimo instead of adagio,
of fff and ppp instead of f and p,
of frequent crescendi and decrescendi instead of an
even level of sonority, of numerous rubatos, ritardandos, and
accelerandos instead of strictly kept tempo, etc. In view of
all these tendencies nothing seems to be more important for the student
than to learn to play without expression. Only the pianist who has learned
to play Bach's Chromatic Fantasia or Beethoven's Apassionata
in the most rigid way will be able to add that amount of nuances and shades
which these works properly require.
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