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Slate Magazine: Why you’ve never really heard the “Moonlight” Sonata.

“One example is the double-octave glissando in the last movement of Beethoven’s “Waldstein” Sonata. With the light action and shallow key dip of a period Viennese piano you can plant your thumb and little finger on the octave and slide to the left, and there it is. Given the much heavier action and deeper key dip of a modern piano, if you tried that today you’d dislocate something.

03/03/10 • 11:01 AM • HistoryMusic • No Comments
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