On 8 Feb 2004 at 23:40, d. collins wrote:

> David W. Fenton écrit:
> >Then why is 3/2 completely unacceptable?
> 
> Well, it would involve cutting all the measures in two, and I don't
> really see the point in it. The presence of a section in 6/4 isn't the
> only reason against changing the 6/2 to 6/4. We've discussed this here
> already, and I (and others) prefer to retain the original time
> signatures.

There's nothing hard about "cutting the measures in two." You just 
change the meter and rebar.

I have never seen any edition of old music with 6/2, ever, and I 
don't think it's going to be easy for people to read.

In the discussion of "old time signatures" I argued that anything 
with a half note beat you keep the original, but with a whole note 
beat, I'm all for halving the note values, simply because of the huge 
problem with the rests. Also, it's just too easy to get lost within 
measures of such huge note values.

If a previous section is in 6/4 and you're trying to maintain 
proportionality, this can be handled with an indication of the 
original meter and an equivalence between the 6/2 section and the 
previous section.

I think you'd have real performance problems with 6/2 -- I'd never 
put it before the performers in the NYU Collegium, and they perform 
in old time signatures all the time (and occasionally in original 
notation).

-- 
David W. Fenton                        http://www.bway.net/~dfenton
David Fenton Associates                http://www.bway.net/~dfassoc


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