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The Shock of the Old
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15927 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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7 / 1989 |
1,899 Words |
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Lawrence O'' Toole Lawrence O'Toole writes on the arts for Entertainment Weekly
and other national publications. |
Just when rabid music lovers thought they had heard everything under the sun, with every composer interpreted within an inch of his music's life, along came a completely new way of approaching "classical" music, that is, music not specifically modern. This new approach is, paradoxically, a regression--a return to the original sound of the music as it was written by, say, Handel, Mozart, or Beethoven.
Modern strings, for example, are set at a higher pitch than those used in the Baroque or Classical periods. Over the years a great number of refinements have been made in musical instruments and their ranges have been particularly extended, so that modern performances of old works have a decidedly contemporary patina. With original instruments, an orchestra evokes what an original listener must have heard (and therefore felt) while listening to a serenade by Mozart or a symphony by Beethoven.
Such scrupulousness might strike some as unforgivably prosaic. Aren't performances by Furtwangler or Mengelberg of the Beethoven symphonies using modern instruments great? Well, yes they are, and there's room for any number of musical interpretations of the symphonies. But Beethoven conducted by Roger Norrington using original instruments is great, too. Original instruments don't negate modern ones; they simply provide a fresh way of hearing music.
Taste, of course, has a lot to do with it. To some ears (mine included) modern instruments on Handel don't have enough weight and color. Emotionally, the textures of original instruments are more pleasing to some; it's an instinctual
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