The influence of the English pianoforte on keyboard technique and composition from 1790 to 1826

The purpose of this research is to define the significant elements of influence of the English piano regarding the style of piano playing and composing from 1790 to 1826. This study will focus on repertoire written by the group of composers labelled by Nicholas Temperley as the London Pianoforte Sch...

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Main Author: Ouyang, Jing
Published: Manchester Metropolitan University 2017
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.734322
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-7343222018-06-12T03:52:35ZThe influence of the English pianoforte on keyboard technique and composition from 1790 to 1826Ouyang, Jing2017The purpose of this research is to define the significant elements of influence of the English piano regarding the style of piano playing and composing from 1790 to 1826. This study will focus on repertoire written by the group of composers labelled by Nicholas Temperley as the London Pianoforte School, which included Clementi, Cramer and Dussek. There is currently no systematic study or published scholarly discussion on this topic, which takes account of the full diversity of both the repertoire itself and the pianistic techniques and documented performance style of the London Pianoforte School. This study is to investigate the possible ways of performing the music on the pianofortes in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, in order to help performers in the present day to produce variety of tone production and a historically informed performance on a modern piano. In the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the compositional and performance style in London changed in accordance with the rapid development of English pianos. An examination of the music written by composers of the London Pianoforte School shows that producing a singing tone; the favour of mixing harmonies; the variety of touches and extensive utilisation of embellishments in fast movements were significant characteristic elements of performance in London at the time. These features encouraged a new way of notating the scores in composition and of producing sound in performance. This study is led by my own practice as a performer in a series of representative works, interpreted critically on modern and historical instruments with a written commentary. The methodology I have used includes study of treatises on performance practice in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries; reception history through contemporary reviews; autograph and original editions of musical scores and my own video demonstrations accompanied by annotated scores.Manchester Metropolitan Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.734322http://e-space.mmu.ac.uk/620029/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
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description The purpose of this research is to define the significant elements of influence of the English piano regarding the style of piano playing and composing from 1790 to 1826. This study will focus on repertoire written by the group of composers labelled by Nicholas Temperley as the London Pianoforte School, which included Clementi, Cramer and Dussek. There is currently no systematic study or published scholarly discussion on this topic, which takes account of the full diversity of both the repertoire itself and the pianistic techniques and documented performance style of the London Pianoforte School. This study is to investigate the possible ways of performing the music on the pianofortes in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, in order to help performers in the present day to produce variety of tone production and a historically informed performance on a modern piano. In the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the compositional and performance style in London changed in accordance with the rapid development of English pianos. An examination of the music written by composers of the London Pianoforte School shows that producing a singing tone; the favour of mixing harmonies; the variety of touches and extensive utilisation of embellishments in fast movements were significant characteristic elements of performance in London at the time. These features encouraged a new way of notating the scores in composition and of producing sound in performance. This study is led by my own practice as a performer in a series of representative works, interpreted critically on modern and historical instruments with a written commentary. The methodology I have used includes study of treatises on performance practice in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries; reception history through contemporary reviews; autograph and original editions of musical scores and my own video demonstrations accompanied by annotated scores.
author Ouyang, Jing
spellingShingle Ouyang, Jing
The influence of the English pianoforte on keyboard technique and composition from 1790 to 1826
author_facet Ouyang, Jing
author_sort Ouyang, Jing
title The influence of the English pianoforte on keyboard technique and composition from 1790 to 1826
title_short The influence of the English pianoforte on keyboard technique and composition from 1790 to 1826
title_full The influence of the English pianoforte on keyboard technique and composition from 1790 to 1826
title_fullStr The influence of the English pianoforte on keyboard technique and composition from 1790 to 1826
title_full_unstemmed The influence of the English pianoforte on keyboard technique and composition from 1790 to 1826
title_sort influence of the english pianoforte on keyboard technique and composition from 1790 to 1826
publisher Manchester Metropolitan University
publishDate 2017
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.734322
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