Book contents
- Fauré Studies
- Cambridge Composer Studies
- Fauré Studies
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Music Examples
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Looking Back on a Journey
- 1 Patrons and Society
- 2 Keys to the Ineffable in Fauré
- 3 Fauré as Student and Teacher of Harmony
- 4 Romancing the mélodie, or Generic Play in the Early Hugo Settings
- 5 Lux aeterna
- 6 From Homer’s Banquet to Fauchois’ Feast
- 7 Orchestral Melody in Pénélope
- 8 Fauré the Practical Interpreter
- 9 Fauré, Orientalism, and Le voile du bonheur
- 10 Jankélévitch, Fauré, and the Thirteenth Nocturne
- Index
8 - Fauré the Practical Interpreter
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 April 2021
- Fauré Studies
- Cambridge Composer Studies
- Fauré Studies
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Music Examples
- Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Looking Back on a Journey
- 1 Patrons and Society
- 2 Keys to the Ineffable in Fauré
- 3 Fauré as Student and Teacher of Harmony
- 4 Romancing the mélodie, or Generic Play in the Early Hugo Settings
- 5 Lux aeterna
- 6 From Homer’s Banquet to Fauchois’ Feast
- 7 Orchestral Melody in Pénélope
- 8 Fauré the Practical Interpreter
- 9 Fauré, Orientalism, and Le voile du bonheur
- 10 Jankélévitch, Fauré, and the Thirteenth Nocturne
- Index
Summary
Any consideration of Fauré as performer is inextricably bound up with how he edited and marked up his scores for performance. A central concern of this chapter is, therefore, how we may read through his notation, its quirks and its variants, to sense Fauré the performer. Most immediately, can doing so shed light on works that have long been neglected or regarded as problematic? The issue needs confronting if Fauré is not to remain peripheral in the repertoire except for a few works, mostly earlier ones. I, too, found many of Fauré’s later works initially impenetrable, until rehearsing and performing them made sense of each one – provided their narratives are coherently articulated and paced in performance. It often involved interaction with critical editing, through reciprocal processes of source discoveries, on the one hand, and practical experiment with extant readings on the other, particularly when these revealed ambiguities.
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- Fauré Studies , pp. 170 - 191Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021