DownloadThe Portobello Bookshop Gift Guide 2024

Off the Record

Performing Practices in Romantic Piano Playing

Neal Peres Da Costa author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc

Published:31st May '12

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Off the Record cover

Off the Record is a revealing exploration of piano performing practices of the high Romantic era. Author and well-known pianist Neal Peres Da Costa bases his investigation on a range of early sound recordings (acoustic, piano roll and electric) that capture a generation of highly-esteemed pianists trained as far back as the mid-nineteenth-century. Placing general practices of late nineteenth-century piano performance alongside evidence of the stylistic idiosyncrasies of legendary pianists such as Carl Reinecke (1824-1910), Theodor Leschetizky (1830-1915), Camille Saint-Saëns (1838-1921) and Johannes Brahms (1833-1897), he examines prevalent techniques of the time--dislocation, unnotated arpeggiation, rhythmic alteration, tempo fluctuation--and unfolds the background and lineage of significant performer/pedagogues. Throughout, Peres Da Costa demonstrates that these early recordings do not simply capture the idiosyncrasies of aging musicians as has been commonly asserted, but in fact represent a range of established expressive practices of a lost age. An extensive collection of these rare and never-before-heard professional recordings of the Romantic age masters are available on a companion web site, and in addition, Peres Da Costa, himself a renowned period keyboardist, illustrates points made throughout the book with his own playing. Of essential value to student and professional pianists, historical musicologists of 19th and early 20th century performance practice, and also to the general music aficionado audience, Off the Record is an indispensable resource for scholarly research, performance inspiration, and listening enjoyment.

Da Costa's book is ground-breaking: 'authenticity' is only reached by taking the score with a grain of salt and diving into the spontaneous creativity of the pre-war style. * NRC Handelsblad *
[Peres da Costa] has read everything, listened to everything and marshalled it into a well-written and logically organised narrative. His range of references is highly impressive. He has provided pianophiles with some thought-provoking questions. * Jeremy Nicholas, Gramophone *
an extremely welcome addition to the bookshelves of every performing musician, teacher, musicologist and music professional ... With painstaking accuracy, Da Costa analyses an impressive number of audio documents - without limiting himself to the field of piano performance ... It is therefore a must-read book for all performers involved with Romantic music, but also a book to be 'listened to', to be placed on the music stand and to be practically experienced, as it will brins fresh inspiration and whole new expressive palette to the interpreters of nineteenth-century works. * Chiara Bertoglio, Pianola Journal *
Peres Da Costa's engagingly accessible questioning of modern historicist practices, and his reassertion of the need for performer-led performance-practice scholarship, will undoubtedly inspire legions of painists looking to rethink their approaches to nineteenth-century repertoires. * Anna Scott, Context *
Engaging and thought provoking ... An outstanding contribution to the discussion of how Romantic piano music might be performed ... No serious teacher, performer (or critic) of the Romantic piano literature should be without this book. In questioning old assumptions and presenting a wealth of historical information, it will make you play and listen with new ears. * Limelight Magazine (Australia) *
The section on unnotated arpeggiation (with its oral tradition extending back to Bach) is particularly fascinating; pianists performing Beethoven, Chopin, and Brahms may find this discussion liberating. Via audio examples on the companion website the author reveals how his research has affected his own keyboard playing ... Recommended. * Choice *
A very welcome and important addition to our understanding of how pianists of an earlier generation performed nineteenth century romantic piano repertoire. * ARSC Journal *
Excellent. * Alex Ross, TheRestIsNoise.com *

ISBN: 9780195386912

Dimensions: 152mm x 236mm x 28mm

Weight: 640g

378 pages