Author: kdk ★2017
Date: 2015-04-17 03:43
You're right, of course, about the way the the Mozart Serenade is notated, which I realized when I looked it up earlier today (I haven't played it in years).
So that leaves me back to wondering what the comma/apostrophe/breath mark means. That it was placed above the slur in 1879 and below the turn sign in 1946 doesn't help much, except to suggest that it doesn't imply any pitch changes in the turn.
If I run across a facsimile of the original edition, it may be explained there. Otherwise, I guess, whatever it means, it has gone out of use and is more or less irrelevant. My violin colleague hasn't ever seen this notation, either, in any of the violin material he studied.
Karl
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