Actually Bream is not "old fashioned". This is rather modern attitude - a
need for steady rhythm and sharp accents. In baroque period breaking chords
was absolutely common practice and thought of as embellishment.
G.Frescobaldi, Toccate 1615 :
"The openings of the toccatas are to be taken adagio and arpeggiando; it is
the same with suspensions or discords, even in the middle of the work, one
breaks them together, so as not to leave the instrument empty; which
breaking is to be performed at the discretion of the performer"

As far as rhythm is concerned flexibility was the rule:
1/Th. Mace Musick's Monument
"Many Drudge, and take much Pains to Play their Lessons very Perfectly,
which when they can do, you will perceive Little Life, or Spirit in them.
They do not labour to find out the Humour, Life, or Spirit of their
lessons."
2/Jean Rousseau, Traite de la Viole 1687
There are people who imagine that imparting the movement is to follow and
keep time; but these are very different matters....."
3/Joachim Quantz, Essay 1752
"The performance should be easy and flexible. However difficult the passage,
it must be played without stiffness or constraint."
Obviously it involves the problem of borrowing or steeling time. However
whatever we do, the question is not- should we do it- but rather -is it
tasteful. And a Good taste is really precious for me. 

Jaroslaw
 

-----Original Message-----
From: Andrew Gibbs [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Thursday, January 31, 2008 10:40 AM
To: Stewart McCoy
Cc: Lute Net
Subject: [LUTE] Re: Playing in time (olim Polish, anyone?)

I like these quotes.

.but do you think the occasional (and tasteful) spreading of chords  
is a bad or non-HIP thing?

Andrew


On 30 Jan 2008, at 17:17, Stewart McCoy wrote:

> In the last few years, Julian Bream has given master classes at  
> Lute Society
> meetings in London. He stressed two things: the need to play notes  
> together,
> (i.e. not to roll and spread chords); and to play in time. He said,  
> "I may
> be old-fashioned, but I like music to be played in time."


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