If Rachmaninoff would have used lilypond that would not have happened!
But may be he was a nice guy and did it just to give some brilliant
interprets a chance?
His No. 1 in F minor shifts unsteadily throughout in time signature from
2/4, 3/4, 4/4, 5/4, and 3/2. It is sayed Rachmaninoff played Frédéric
Chopin's Étude Op. 25, No. 4, while writing this étude.
Anyway, just breaking rules does not automatically make a genius - I
already tried that!
Am 21.08.2015 20:56, schrieb Malte Meyn:
Am 21.08.2015 um 20:45 schrieb Blöchl Bernhard:
Interesting! New rules for basics of music.
I think this is too bold an assumption. It may very well be that
there
is one 3/4 measure here, and I would trust the original typeset here.
Not every time signature change is printed in every music. Even if you
see it as a “basic rule”. See for example the last one of
Rachmaninov’s Etudes-Tableaux. Rachmaninov knew what he did.
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