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Re: In the early twentieth century, the idea that pianists should be music [#permalink]
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Westminster wrote:
can anyone explain this sentence--She was a genius at underlining the dramatic and emotional content of a piece, and to do so, she took liberties, all kinds of liberties,

""while nevertheless preserving the integrity of a composer’s score""


in the first question's solution shows option :e , how would it be an answer, however, "she preserved the integrity of a composer score""


Question 1:
The passage suggests that Landowska’s playing embodied a rejection of which of the following?

A) Emotionally resonant interpretations of musical works.
B) An audience’s complete silence during a performance.
C) Performances of previously obscure Baroque works.
D) The idea that a performer can correctly judge when not to hold the printed note sacrosanct.
E) Performances emphasizing showy displays of technique that compromise the integrity of a composer’s original score.

'Rejection' is the key
As per passage Landowska's playing preserves the integrity of a composer's score. But option E says the 'compromise of the integrity of composer's original score'
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Re: In the early twentieth century, the idea that pianists should be music [#permalink]
Hi SajjadAhmad
Can you please post answer for Q3.

Cannot find much difference between A and D.
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Re: In the early twentieth century, the idea that pianists should be music [#permalink]
SajjadAhmad wrote:
hero_with_1000_faces wrote:
Hi SajjadAhmad
Can you please post answer for Q3.

Cannot find much difference between A and D.


Official Explanation


3. The passage suggests that Landowska would probably have objected most strongly to which of the following?

Difficulty Level: 750

Explanation

The passage tells us that Landowska was an adherent of the idea that performers of other people's musical works should play “the way composers wanted their music to sound” (line 2-3). In the context of the passage, this means that performers should use the instrument for which the music was originally written. This rules out Choices B, C, and D, as they are not examples of this kind of deviation from the composers’ intentions.

Choice A is incorrect since the passage tells us that Bach's music was “originally composed for the harpsichord” (First line of last para).

This leaves Choice E as the only correct option: Landowska would object to the music originally intended for the piano being performed on a harpsichord.

Answer: E



Hi SajjadAhmad

Can you please clarify one Doubt.

We know for fact that "Bach and Scarlatti" composed music which were for Harp.

However in this question 3. "A" states that 'A performance of a Bach keyboard piece played on the harpsichord.

Doesn't Keyboard piece means, composed for Piano ? any musicians in the house ? lol
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Re: In the early twentieth century, the idea that pianists should be music [#permalink]
can anyone explain this sentence--She was a genius at underlining the dramatic and emotional content of a piece, and to do so, she took liberties, all kinds of liberties,

""while nevertheless preserving the integrity of a composer’s score""


in the first question's solution shows option :e , how would it be an answer, however, "she preserved the integrity of a composer score""
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Re: In the early twentieth century, the idea that pianists should be music [#permalink]
Sajjad1994 wrote:
hero_with_1000_faces wrote:
Hi SajjadAhmad
Can you please post answer for Q3.

Cannot find much difference between A and D.


Official Explanation


3. The passage suggests that Landowska would probably have objected most strongly to which of the following?

Difficulty Level: 750

Explanation

The passage tells us that Landowska was an adherent of the idea that performers of other people's musical works should play “the way composers wanted their music to sound” (line 2-3). In the context of the passage, this means that performers should use the instrument for which the music was originally written. This rules out Choices B, C, and D, as they are not examples of this kind of deviation from the composers’ intentions.

Choice A is incorrect, since the passage tells us that Bach's music was “originally composed for the harpsichord” (First line of last para).

This leaves Choice E as the only correct option: Landowska would object to the music originally intended for the piano being performed on a harpsichord.

Answer: E


Please can you post OE for Q4?
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Re: In the early twentieth century, the idea that pianists should be music [#permalink]
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junii wrote:
Please can you post OE for Q4?


Official Explanation


4. The author’s assertion that Landowska should not be considered a classicist serves primarily to emphasize which of the following?

Difficulty Level: 650

Explanation

The second paragraph of the passage suggests that the primary difference between the Classical and the Romantic styles of playing is that the former puts emphasis on technical mastery and faithfulness to the original score, while the latter focuses on the emotional aspects of performance. Therefore, Choice C is correct.

Answer: C
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Re: In the early twentieth century, the idea that pianists should be music [#permalink]
I'm having difficulty comprehending the second paragraph, "but it was at least as close in spirit to the style of playing intended by composers of the Baroque (1600–1750) and Classical (1750–1830) eras, as have been the more exacting but less emotionally resonant interpretations of most harpsichordists since Landowska". Can someone please help me out here?
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Re: In the early twentieth century, the idea that pianists should be music [#permalink]
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Re: In the early twentieth century, the idea that pianists should be music [#permalink]
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