Singer And Accompanist - The Performance Of Fifty Songs (Large print, Hardcover, Large type / large print edition)


SINGER AND ACCOMPANIST The Performance of Fifty Songs SINGER AND ACCOMPANIST The Performance of Fifty Songs by GERALD MOORE METHUEN CO. LTD. LONDON 36 Essex Street, Strand, W. C. 2 To ENID PREFACE IT has not been my intention in the following pages to attempt critical analyses of the fifty songs under review although an analytical note may occasionally have crept in but rather to explain how the execu tants might sing and play them above all to suggest lines they could think along when practising, rehearsing, and performing them. I hope the word suggest 5 will be noted. I have used it advisedly for there are many roads to heaven and while I am confident that my road will not lead to destruction, I do not claim that it is the only way. Let him who disagrees with my ideas make his own investigation and find out what suits him best. I shall be happy if this book has this stimulating effect. I believe that equal consideration has been given to the two partners, but if more attention than is usual in a book on song interpret ation has been bestowed on the accompaniment I make no apology it has been done for the good of the song and should prove of ultimate benefit to the singer. There is no law, human or divine said Ernest Newman in 1907, c to compel the composer to limit his expressiveness to the voice alone. The Schubert, Wolf, Faure songs to mention three composers at random included here can be called great songs. To the question What are Beethovens Mailied, Rachmaninoffs Spring Waters, Hahns Offrande doing in such distinguished company 5 I would answer that the first song presents difficulties to the singer a the second teases the pianist, while the Hahn song is intriguing if only forits wide dissimilarity to the undeniably finer settings of the same poem by Debussy and Faur6. The only rule I observed when selecting my fifty songs was that they should be interesting interesting either for their intrinsic worth or for the problems they pose for the singer or the accompanist or both partners. The reader who is indulgent enough to imagine there is any benefit to be reaped by a study of this book, should dip into it rather than attempt to read it steadily from cover to cover. Let him see which of these songs he possesses and then after numbering the bars on his score to help him follow me on my wanderings through the song have his music beside him as he reads. He will thus be in a much better vii Vlll SINGER AND ACCOMPANIST position to laugh with me or at me to see how unerringly I hit the nail on the head or how lamentable is my aim. To two great friends I would like to express my deep gratitude to Mr. L. A. G. Strong for his encouragement and patience ever since he approached me with the idea of this book, and to Mr. Alec Robertson for his invaluable and constructive criticism on its completion. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS i WISH to express my thanks to Miss Astra Desmond and to Messrs. Richard Capell, Martin Cooper, and Ernest Newman for permission to quote from their writings to Mr. G. Bernard Brophy for his trouble and kindness in the selection of gramophone records to Noel Douglas Ltd., publishers, for allowing me to reprint the excerpt from Monsieur Croche 5 and finally to all the publishers enumerated at the end of each song for their generous co-operation in allowing me to reprint so many musical illustrations. London 1953 G. M...

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SINGER AND ACCOMPANIST The Performance of Fifty Songs SINGER AND ACCOMPANIST The Performance of Fifty Songs by GERALD MOORE METHUEN CO. LTD. LONDON 36 Essex Street, Strand, W. C. 2 To ENID PREFACE IT has not been my intention in the following pages to attempt critical analyses of the fifty songs under review although an analytical note may occasionally have crept in but rather to explain how the execu tants might sing and play them above all to suggest lines they could think along when practising, rehearsing, and performing them. I hope the word suggest 5 will be noted. I have used it advisedly for there are many roads to heaven and while I am confident that my road will not lead to destruction, I do not claim that it is the only way. Let him who disagrees with my ideas make his own investigation and find out what suits him best. I shall be happy if this book has this stimulating effect. I believe that equal consideration has been given to the two partners, but if more attention than is usual in a book on song interpret ation has been bestowed on the accompaniment I make no apology it has been done for the good of the song and should prove of ultimate benefit to the singer. There is no law, human or divine said Ernest Newman in 1907, c to compel the composer to limit his expressiveness to the voice alone. The Schubert, Wolf, Faure songs to mention three composers at random included here can be called great songs. To the question What are Beethovens Mailied, Rachmaninoffs Spring Waters, Hahns Offrande doing in such distinguished company 5 I would answer that the first song presents difficulties to the singer a the second teases the pianist, while the Hahn song is intriguing if only forits wide dissimilarity to the undeniably finer settings of the same poem by Debussy and Faur6. The only rule I observed when selecting my fifty songs was that they should be interesting interesting either for their intrinsic worth or for the problems they pose for the singer or the accompanist or both partners. The reader who is indulgent enough to imagine there is any benefit to be reaped by a study of this book, should dip into it rather than attempt to read it steadily from cover to cover. Let him see which of these songs he possesses and then after numbering the bars on his score to help him follow me on my wanderings through the song have his music beside him as he reads. He will thus be in a much better vii Vlll SINGER AND ACCOMPANIST position to laugh with me or at me to see how unerringly I hit the nail on the head or how lamentable is my aim. To two great friends I would like to express my deep gratitude to Mr. L. A. G. Strong for his encouragement and patience ever since he approached me with the idea of this book, and to Mr. Alec Robertson for his invaluable and constructive criticism on its completion. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS i WISH to express my thanks to Miss Astra Desmond and to Messrs. Richard Capell, Martin Cooper, and Ernest Newman for permission to quote from their writings to Mr. G. Bernard Brophy for his trouble and kindness in the selection of gramophone records to Noel Douglas Ltd., publishers, for allowing me to reprint the excerpt from Monsieur Croche 5 and finally to all the publishers enumerated at the end of each song for their generous co-operation in allowing me to reprint so many musical illustrations. London 1953 G. M...

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Product Details

General

Imprint

Read Books

Country of origin

United Kingdom

Release date

November 2008

Availability

Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days

First published

November 2008

Authors

Dimensions

216 x 140 x 17mm (L x W x T)

Format

Hardcover - Laminated cover

Pages

248

Edition

Large type / large print edition

ISBN-13

978-1-4437-3118-8

Barcode

9781443731188

Categories

LSN

1-4437-3118-8



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