In April 2014, fortepianist and Mozart specialist John Irving recorded a CD of solo keyboard sonatas by Joseph Haydn, using a modern copy of a Viennese fortepiano of Haydn’s era. This is an account of the project written from the performer’s perspective, examining some relevant issues of historical performance practice, organology, and detailed reflections upon the performer’s preparations (of various musical and technical kinds) for the recording
As it comes to the act of creation, performing musicians claim a rather specific role and position c...
Description of the Cambridge Encyclopedia of Historical Performance in Music: Recent decades have se...
Between 1903 and 1906, Edvard Grieg recorded several of his most popular pieces on piano rolls and g...
This submission for the PhD degree at the Elder Conservatorium of Music, University of Adelaide, mad...
Includes bibliographical references (page 23)For many decades, discrepancies among performers and th...
Description of the Cambridge Encyclopedia of Historical Performance in Music: Recent decades have se...
Description of the Cambridge Encyclopedia of Historical Performance in Music: Recent decades have se...
The article is a daring attempt to define and discuss a number of issues that arise around the term ...
Imagine, we had sound recordings by Monteverdi, Bach, or Mozart, together with detailed bar-by-bar i...
The purpose of this study is to examine many different topics that contribute to a historically info...
Whilst historically informed performance normally makes use of instruments of the era from which the...
Listeners have enjoyed classical music recordings for more than a century, yet important issues abou...
The 20th-century heralded unprecedented change in ‘classical’ music performance aesthetics as docume...
During the past thirty years or so, historical performance in theory and practice has truly establis...
We know from eighteenth-century sources on performance practice that tempo fluctuations in the shape...
As it comes to the act of creation, performing musicians claim a rather specific role and position c...
Description of the Cambridge Encyclopedia of Historical Performance in Music: Recent decades have se...
Between 1903 and 1906, Edvard Grieg recorded several of his most popular pieces on piano rolls and g...
This submission for the PhD degree at the Elder Conservatorium of Music, University of Adelaide, mad...
Includes bibliographical references (page 23)For many decades, discrepancies among performers and th...
Description of the Cambridge Encyclopedia of Historical Performance in Music: Recent decades have se...
Description of the Cambridge Encyclopedia of Historical Performance in Music: Recent decades have se...
The article is a daring attempt to define and discuss a number of issues that arise around the term ...
Imagine, we had sound recordings by Monteverdi, Bach, or Mozart, together with detailed bar-by-bar i...
The purpose of this study is to examine many different topics that contribute to a historically info...
Whilst historically informed performance normally makes use of instruments of the era from which the...
Listeners have enjoyed classical music recordings for more than a century, yet important issues abou...
The 20th-century heralded unprecedented change in ‘classical’ music performance aesthetics as docume...
During the past thirty years or so, historical performance in theory and practice has truly establis...
We know from eighteenth-century sources on performance practice that tempo fluctuations in the shape...
As it comes to the act of creation, performing musicians claim a rather specific role and position c...
Description of the Cambridge Encyclopedia of Historical Performance in Music: Recent decades have se...
Between 1903 and 1906, Edvard Grieg recorded several of his most popular pieces on piano rolls and g...