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Puccini's Orchestration

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2020

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In order to say anything new about Puccini's orchestration, it is necessary to subject his manuscripts to a detailed scrutiny and it soon becomes apparent that many pages of his writing have not yet been microscopically examined. In fact the early copyists, probably working under the difficult pressure of a late arrival of the manuscript from the composer and an imminent theatrical rehearsal, appear to have approached his compositions with a certain creative flair of their own. Of the two operas which I have been able to copy out almost completely from the manuscripts, La Bohème and Tosca, only three or four pages towards the end of Act I of Tosca could be said to have been accurately copied, as though the work of copying might have fallen into different hands for those pages. Elsewhere throughout both scores, apart from the obvious changes which Puccini brought to his composition subsequently, there is a general wash of ‘editing’ which has introduced an average of from 40 to 50 small changes on each and every page of the score.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Musical Association, 1960

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References

1 Notably pages 186 and 187.Google Scholar

All page references to La Bohème and Tosca are based on the miniature scores published by Ricordi, Milan.Google Scholar

2 As recorded by his rehearsal pianist at this period, Luigi Ricci, Puccini Interprete di se Stesso, Milan, 1954.Google Scholar

3 Summed up under the heading ‘Phrasing’ in my introduction to John Stanley, Voluntaries for the Organ, London, 1957.Google Scholar

4 Indicated in Example 5 by square brackets.Google Scholar

5 p. 299. The dynamic marks erased by Puccini are in square brackets.Google Scholar

6 In Ex. 7 (p. 156) the slurs in square brackets are these of the printed score.Google Scholar