• Home
  • About
  • News
  • Watch + Listen
  • Read
  • Contact

Marisa Gupta

  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Watch + Listen
  • Read
  • Contact

Playing Styles in the Age of Recording

Beverly Pack.jpg

The second of a series of blogposts originally published by Yellow Barn, and updated here in 2020. Written in conjunction with my artists’ residencies there and entitled ‘Faithful to the Sprit’, the residencies put into practice my work as an Edison Visiting Fellow at the British Library, exploring how recordings changed how we make and experience music.

'The biggest problem with today's playing is that people want to sound smooth and nice; everything is ironed out flat,' Raphael Wallfisch, Strad magazine

Judging from reactions to this online, these words resonated with and provoked musicians in equal measure, suggesting an opportune moment to examine these sentiments more closely. Though the focus of our upcoming residency is not necessarily performance practice, it is impossible to deny the differences between the (by modern standards) eccentric performances heard on early recordings and today’s smoother approach. Scholarly studies of early recordings attest to the fact that attributes we might today view as idiosyncrasies were integral aspects of performance styles of the time; characteristics not just of performers, but of composers’ own views and performances. Whether we choose to adopt the playing styles or not, before dismissing them outright as distasteful or self-indulgent, it is worth giving these stylistic habits due consideration, in the same manner afforded to written treatises in earlier music.

Read more

tags: Recordings, Historical Recordings, Composers, Robert Philip, early recordings, Daniel Leech-Wilkinson, Timothy Day, British Library, Rubato, Portamento, tempo, rhythm, Debussy, Rachmaninoff, Grieg, Bartók, András Schiff, Elgar, Raphael Wallfisch, Julian Anderson, Composers in Person, A Century of Recorded Music, CHARM, Neal Peres da Costa, Off the Record, Yellow Barn, Marisa Gupta
Thursday 11.05.20
Posted by Marisa Gupta
 

The Cult of the Work

Montage The Cult of the Work.jpg

The third in a series of writings for Yellow Barn related to my artist residencies there, exploring how recordings have impacted how we make and experience music, in conjunction with a British Library Edison Fellowship.

The Cult of the Work

During our talks in Putney (at the Greenwood School and for the general audience) we framed the discussion in terms of an issue raised by various commentators: whether music is an object or an activity. It is, of course, an activity. However we have, in certain ways, taken steps towards turning it into an object (through musical scores and recordings). In doing so all kinds of "rules" have been created – many of which we are unaware of; our residency was about becoming aware of and re-thinking these "rules".


Read more

tags: Yellow Barn, Marisa Gupta, Lydia Goehr, Imaginary Museum of Musical Works, Kenneth Hamilton, Werktreue, western classical music, canon, notation, Mozart, Clementi, extemporization, Liszt, British Library, Timothy Day, historical recordings, early recordings
categories: Writings
Thursday 11.05.20
Posted by Marisa Gupta
 

Powered by Squarespace.