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Sightreader wrote: > > "Nightingale" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message > news:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > > Why this preference for newer rather than older? Change is not > > necessarily progress or improvement. Can you even really say one is > > better? It depends what you are looking for. > > I'm always in favor of increased variety. I would never > advocate a halt in period playing and technology research. > But if there is a way to incorporate the advantages of more > modern instruments without losing the subtleties of the > composer's writing, I think it's worth experimenting with. I > certainly don't see the use in refusing to entertain such > research, especially if existing period and modern playing > approaches are not comprimised in the process. > > Right now it seems that people are stuck at an impasse, > one side arguing for modern instruments, others arguing > for period instruments. Why can't instruments be built > to bridge the gap rather than forcing a choice between > one extreme or the other? Can instruments with modern > capabilities be made to bring out the period characteristics > that composers were exploiting? Why don't you address Nightingale's example of the "short octave" at the bottom of the keyboard, that made possible playing intervals that cannot be played on a modern keyboard instrument? "Progress" isn't necessarily always best. There's a huge literature in historiography on the notion of progress -- have a look at it. -- Peter T. Daniels [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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