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		 10 years of Partitura Verlag  | 
	
by Stephanie Gurtner, translated by: Sohpia Benedict
Throughout my life as a musician, I have often returned to the question: why do pianists and singers have the full score in front of them, whilst I, as a viola player, must be content with a single stave? Are those who play a melody instrument, perhaps, already overstretched? Does the mastery of one's own instrument leave no room for a comprehensive overview during the rehearsal? Or do instrumental players automatically have so good a musical memory as to be able to see the entire score without notes? Very few are so fortunate. Or do the musicians simply care too little about what their partners are playing? That may well be the case occasionally, but cannot be the sole reason.
many such scores are played. In addition to the instrument and the music stand, a large folder for the card has to be dragged along, as well as an iron to smoothen the folded card! Famous string quartets play from home-made scores. Speaking with colleagues, I realised that many of them wished to play from printed full scores. Why, then, do publishers shy away from publishing such scores?
At the beginning, we pondered over many questions: how small could the piano part be, in order for it to be seen? How would the page turns work? We soon realised that if the melody line has too few rests, we had a problem – because the page turns have to be manageable. Our prototype was the sonata in F minor op. 120 no 1 for viola and piano by Brahms, and it worked. And so began Partitura Verlag. In March 2007 we set up a small stand at the Frankfurter Musikmesse selling our first catalogue: eight sonatas with piano, three trios and a string quartet.
Kashkashian and Roger Benedict. And so it rapidly developed into a specialized viola publishers. This, I feel, is not a coincidence: perhaps viola players react well to the new offer having gained a unique understanding of the complete score from their position in the middle of an orchestra or a quartet.
In addition to original literature, our catalogue contains adaptations for viola and piano of violin works, as well as transcriptions of works for voice and piano. We also have solo pieces for viola, and virtuosic transcriptions of Spanish guitar music for solo viola. Our programme is enriched by transcriptions of Argentinian tangos and, a personal love of mine, tangos from Finland. The next planned edition contains both Argentine and Finnish tangos; look forward to the duos for two violas!Review Brahms in «The Orchestra»: www.dasorchester.de
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