Klarinet Archive - Posting 000581.txt from 2010/09

From: X-C-UH-MailScanner-r.n.taylor@-----.uk
Subj: Re: [kl] Improvising in Mozart
Date: Tue, 21 Sep 2010 04:44:05 -0400

Perhaps this has been addressed in some of the learned discussions I glanced over with perhaps insufficient attention - but if 'eingang' means, roughly 'lead in' or 'entry' does this not suggest that it would be an improvisation that referred forward to what is to come, rather than backward to what has just happened? That would be to place a rather sweet duty on the performer - almost to set the mood, if you like.

Noel

-----Original Message-----
From: Jennifer Jones [mailto:helen.jennifer@-----.com]

I have heard of an eingang. Alas, I had forgotten the term though. I
am glad to be reminded of it.

Dan Leeson's explanation was much clearer than the wiktionary and
wikipedia explanations too. Wikipedia even calls it a cadenza. This
may be one of those well estabi classic point of debate? From what I
remember of the eingang written into my old sheet music, it was Carl
Baermann's famous one, which sounded more like a lead-in than a
segment unto itself.

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