Darcy,
Yes, I know that of course. A few times however in contemporary, more
complicated scores, I found a "piano (or réduction) pour les
répétitions". Maybe that's what you're looking for?
I do remember Boulez and Bartholomée among others.
Cheers,
Hans
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"Never take life seriously; no-one gets out alive anyway".
On 09 aug 08, at 19:20, Darcy James Argue wrote:
Hans,
There is usually a nominal difference between a "rehearsal piano"
part (simplified for playability) and a "piano reduction" (a more
literal representation, which often contains unplayable passages).
- Darcy
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[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Brooklyn, NY
On 9 Aug 2008, at 1:03 PM, Hans Swinnen wrote:
In my experience a "rehearsal piano" of a work with orchestra has
always been a "simplified" orchestra. One has only 10 fingers, no?
Edition could serve as this will published separated for singers
or tutti quanti.
In your actual case I would definitely choose for "Réduction".
Hans
===
You will excuse me for any typo's due to a visual handicap.
On 09 aug 08, at 18:37, Darcy James Argue wrote:
Hi Hans,
Thanks!
"Édition pour piano" won't work because it's a rehearsal piano
*staff* in a opera score. "Réduction" seems closer to the mark,
although it's not a true piano reduction because there are parts
in the orchestration that are omitted from the rehearsal piano part.
- Darcy
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