He's got some serious pickups on that machine! (Which, in my opinion at least, rather defeats the purpose of that most delicate of musical instruments, which is the intimacy of its sound.)Salmoneus wrote: ↑Wed Oct 03, 2018 5:19 pm Maybe nobody else will understand why the Pathetique on a clavichord is so fantastic. Your first reaction will probably be that it sounds weird and ugly. But if you have a spare half an hour, listen to the whole thing!
Bebung. That and the direct touch are indeed the hallmarks of the instrument. It's one of the few instruments where pppppppp is actually possible! As a small chamber instrument, its realistic maximum of about mf is okay. Unless electrically overdriven, as this one seems to be, a clavichord can never hope to balance even the tenderest of recorder music.Here's four great things about it:
a) the clavichord is the most sensitive, faithful keyboard instrument. The player has much more control over its volume than a piano player - they can even change the volume while the note is playing. They can even introduce vibrato! This is inconceivable on ordinary keyboards. In this piece, there are times when Winters (the clavichordist) can drop the volume right to the edge of silence (whereas the piano effectively has a minimum volume below which it can't make any sound) - at one point even reminding me of the silent notes guqin players use, where you can just hear the faintest touch of the string - and then he can crescendo so smoothely and so rapidly! But beyond the things that would obviously be impossible on a piano, throughout the piece we can hear the passion expressed more directly than normally - partly because he intentionally adopts a more heart-on-sleeve interpretation of tempi (etc) but also because the clavichord does just convey the emotion of the player so much more transparently. Playing the piano is like playing through a blanket by comparison...
You can also hit the quarter tones (or maybe fifth tones) by pressing deeper (not harder) on the keys: this causes the tangent to push the string higher up, changing its sounding length a little.
Another neat thing you can do is a "trill" on one single note. Whereas on the piano, there is a waiting period during which two consecutive strikes at the same note can't be made any faster because the hammer is "in flight" to or from the string, on the clavichord, there is no such waiting period. Because your fingers are in constant contact with the keys, and thus with the tangents and thus with the strings themselves, you get an effect kind of like a drum roll.
The instrument, while capable of direct communication between player to instrument to sound of deep emotion, she is also a terrible mistress! She is absolutely unforgiving! Every slightest tap of the wrong key, every incorrectly weighted press on the keys is instantly broadcast as a horrible clashing sound!
Yep! The construction of the instrument is very different. The piano strings are very tense and the hammers are felt, kind of soft and fuzzy and are thrown against the strings which are all but metal bars at that tension. The claivchord is very lightly built: no cast iron frames or heavily built structures. Even the heaviest instruments only weigh about 15 pounds! There is no complex mechanism: just a stick with a small brass tangent that delicately touches the more loosely tensed string with the flat of its blade. (You can get the same effect on a guitar by smartly pressing a string near the fret - it will act somewhat like the clavichord's tangent.)b) those sounds! Sure, it takes a while to get used to. But if you're used to the piano, having such different timbres puts the familiar music in a different light. Two things stand out to me. One is the way that, like a tangentenfluegel, the clavichord's timbre varies over its pitch range, from the relatively sharp treble through to the more muffled, slightly buzzy bass (that reminds me of the arp stop on a muselaar!). The result of this is that the 'vocal line' stands out more clearly from the accompaniment than on a piano (or harpsichord) which doesn't have that timbral effect. The other is just the remarkable sound in the moments where there's a loud, staccato bass, which buzzsaws into the music in a way you can't get from an piano. It's also worth noting that these sounds are all 'purer' than those of a piano, more harmonic, which is why there's that sort of MIDI-file feeling (again, like a muselaar).
Quite right. Back then, you played music on whatever instruments were available. Or you went without. And this piece certainly sound beautiful on the clavichord!c) it's less insane as an idea than it seems. The pathetique was written in 1798, when clavichords would have been widespread in domestic settings, particularly in Germany. When amateurs bought Beethoven's sheet music and tried to play it at home, a lot of them would have been doing it on clavichords, not on pianos - keyboards were often considered interchangeable back then (hence Beethoven's 'Hammerklavier' sonata - simply a demand that it be played specifically on the piano rather than on a different sort of keyboard). Indeed, we know that some experts DID perform Beethoven on clavichords. So, while it's certainly not the sound that Beethoven was intending when he wrote the piece, it's a sound that people in his era would have heard, and that Beethoven would have expected. Indeed, Beethoven himself played clavichords, and it's not impossible that, seated at a clavichord, he might well have played some of his own works.
Heh. And what's ironic about it is that it is music like this (historically informed) performance that has over the last century or so driven the market for "ancient instruments" like the clavichord (and the recorder and the one keyed oboe and the keyed bugle and the ophicleide) to be produced at economically viable numbers again!d) it's a reminder of how revolutionary Beethoven was. Compare this to the usual sort of thing you could hear on a clavichord - Bach, or Mozart. By comparison, Beethoven's music is bursting at the seams of the instrument. Indeed, this piece perhaps as much as any other is why we DON'T have clavichords today, and why the modern piano was invented.
Mr Winter's is clearly playing an overdriven instrument (either electric pickups or a good set of microphones -- the sound is extremely loud and distorted). As clavichords are well known for being quiet, here is a more characteristic volume:[Why? What's wrong with clavichords? Well, three things. First, the sound is relatively thin, lacking the richness of the piano. It's also in a way pure, whereas the piano's inharmonic flaws make it sound more human, and hence affecting. Second, the sustain is much poorer than on a piano, so you don't get the singing quality. And above all: the instrument is inherently very, very quiet. You have to stand close to it, or use microphones. What you CAN'T do is, as you can on a piano, fill an entire auditorium with a fortissimo that can be heard over an orchestra.]
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GWOhzki9TGg
But yes, you hit all the nails on the head: the clavichord is not (and I don't believe was intended to be) an orchestral instrument. It's not even really suitable as a small consort instrument. Unless the sound is magnified.
(Snipped wonderful description.)Some people may also ask: sorry, and what IS a clavichord? Brief answer:
Right. Kind of combines the worst aspects of both instruments. But its sound is rather engaging!Therefore a new invention arose: the tangentenfluegel, or 'tangent piano'. Actually, a bunch of inventions arose, but the tangent piano is the notable one (with one exception - see below). The tangent piano abandons the clavichord idea, and is basically a harpsichord where the harpsichord action is adapted to striking rather than plucking. The vital part is that rather than the key in some way hitting the string, instead the key fires a projectile at the string from below, which hits the string and bounces back into place. This is only a little more complicated than a harpsichord.
And the innovations keep coming......and although it's a mechanically ingenious device with a unique and interesting sound, the tangent piano is now also obsolete, because some bloke called Bartolomeo Cristofori invented an entirely new mechanism, by which hammers could hit strings and then be retracted - and all it took was a couple of dozen moving parts. This immediately meant you could play louder, softer and with more control than the tangent piano, and the new instrument - once people swallowed the high price tag - quickly made all other keyboards obsolete.
The Wheelharp:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MGOqIYo9cBE&t=7s
The Viola Organisata:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jmow9jsPqBc
The Parlour Organ:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fK_cbvtRrbE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7C7i6q0X3xc
The Electric Harpsichord:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BtvIRoUFV7E
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c3DxMX7xDy4
Two Keyboard Piano:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SXxyf6NHXmw
Janko Piano:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ru-aEDO8WfA
Pedal Piano:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DF864Fev0ws