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 sonatas of Domenico Scarlatti">
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 <h1 align=center>Domenico Scarlatti - the Sheet Music</h1>
 <p>
 The purpose of this sheet music publication is to enable as many harpsichordists as possible
 to play Scarlatti's music as he would have played it.
 <p>
 It is formatted so it can be printed portrait orientation on modern A4 or North American letter
 paper. (The original manuscripts are mostly 37x26 cm landscape.) The files are in Postscript
 code, which may be easily printed on almost all computers with free software such as
  <a href="http://www.cs.wisc.edu/~ghost/index.html">GhostScript</a>.
 PostScript code may also be edited directly with a text editor, or WYSIWYG with several
 graphical editors.
 
 <h2> Why Yet Another Scarlatti Edition? </h2>
 <p>
 First, this one is free, it doesn't cost a thousand dollars or more. But there is another reason.
 <p align=center>
 <img src="venice.gif" width=580 height=302 alt="[a fragment of the manuscript]">
 <p>
 In the original manuscripts of the Scarlatti sonatas, notes are divided between the two staves
 at middle C, not to indicate whether the right or left hand should be used. Note stem directions
 were mostly chosen for maximum readability of the score. The apportionment between hands
 in the Longo edition was done by Longo, writing as a piano player long after Scarlatti's style
 had fallen into disuse, and omits many of the hand assignments in Scarlatti's original text, let
 alone showing the variety of hand-over-hand variations possible in a piece.
 <p>
 There are many treatises of Scarlatti's time on ornamentation, phrasing, variation and other
 such essentials of his musicianship. But, these all omit Scarlatti's hand crossing style because
 his playing and music were unique in this respect. Almost all of his music is written with
 implied pauses in one hand or the other that permit variations in hand crossings - right over or
 under left, left over or under right, even intermixed. From the consistency of these pauses
 throughout his music, I am convinced that this was the primary variation technique that he
 used. I believe that you should be able to play most Scarlatti phrases with either hand
 interchangeably, and make them sound exactly the same either way, if you are to understand
 his keyboard technique.
 <p>
 This edition presents the results of my study of Scarlatti, by writing out examples of hand
 crossings in the style I consider Scarlatti likely used while playing. It follows the numbering
 of Kirkpatrick ("Domenico Scarlatti", Ralph Kirkpatrick, Princeton,1953), and assumes the
 use of a single manual harpsichord. Scarlatti's sounds do not transfer at all well to modern
 pianos, although his breathtaking technique does, as Vladimir Horowitz amply demonstrated.
 Piano players will have to adapt the music to their instrument. (I still don't know how
 Horowitz managed such speed on instruments with the incredibly heavy actions of the concert
 grands he used!)
 <p>
 No one who knows only Czerny-derived technique, with its expectation that arms remain at
 right angles to the keyboard, will be able to play even half the variations shown in the
 manuscripts. You must learn to play with arms completely parallel to the keyboard, with
 finger action like legs walking, in order to play with hands crossed to the extent Scarlatti
 wrote. A bass interval played with the right hand is done with thumb on the upper note, not the
 lower. Left hand bass octave runs are played with thumb action similar to the heel-and-toeing
 of organists and 5th finger crossing over the 4th, not thumping the way pianists are taught
 today. Rapidly repeated notes on a harpsichord may be smoothly played with one finger, as if
 they were half a trill. Scarlatti explicitly noted when he wanted the rougher sound of 'changed
 fingers', a two-fingered 'trill' on one note - most can not be played as written with four fingers
 flailing the way pianists are taught today. And so on. Using techniques of Scarlatti's time, on a
 keyboard of his time, these sonatas can indeed be played the way they are written here.
 However, when I made my recordings, I used fingerings that made them sound their best.
 Wild hand crossings belong in front of a live audience, intricate ones are for private
 enjoyment. Neither work in a recording studio.
 <p>
 There were several pianofortes and at least one 2-manual harpsichord at the Spanish court, and
 some of the sonatas appear to have been written for each. As Kirkpatrick has shown, however,
 no instruments at the court other than the Spanish single-manual harpsichords had the note
 compass needed to play all of the sonatas. One might think that occurrences of things like an
 8th note + 8th rest in parallel with a 16th rest + same note 16th + 2 other 16th notes would
 indicate 2-manual usage. But, when I go through all the sonatas in detail, I'm convinced that it
 didn't to Scarlatti: I can find no correlation with overlapped notes vs. non-overlapped. This
 usage seems designed to say something about musical context, not about manual usage. What
 I can say is that about a fifth of the sonatas work with two manual overlapped-note sound, but
 that I find the one manual sounds to be more consistent across the oeuvre.
 
 <h2> Editorial Philosophy </h2>
 <p>
 A manuscript, originally presented to Queen Maria Barbara of Spain, is preserved in its
 original 16 volume binding at the Biblioteca Marciana in Venice, Italy. A second copy, mostly
 in the same hand and apparently made at the same time for Scarlatti's own use, is kept at the
 Biblioteca Palatina in Parma. Ralph Kirkpatrick arranged for the publication in facsimile of
 the Parma manuscript, and of some other Scarlatti pieces preserved only in derivative
 collections. As a result of Kirkpatrick's publication, the content of his manuscripts is free from
 copyright and ownership restrictions, and is the authority for this edition.
 <p>
 However, printing is black and white, and music isn't. A musician has to peer through the
 limitations of notation to hear a live person, the composer, then bring that composer's ideas to
 life in the performer's world. Successful users of this edition must do the same. In Scarlatti's
 time, a performer was expected to be as able a musician as the composer. Music was read and
 re-created, not memorised note for note. I do not know when it became acceptable to play
 absolutely identical repeats, but it was after Scarlatti's time! Notation was intended to
 communicate the essence of the music rather than to prescribe how to play it. Performers were
 reminded of the composer's usual stylistic elements only occasionally, rather than by writing
 them out in full. This edition does the same.
 <p>
 Every note and duration from the Parma manuscript is preserved. You will find no modern
 'interpretation' or 'corrections' here in that respect. I have avoided like the plague that panacea
 of small minds, 'regularization' of original variation. Beaming is preserved whenever possible,
 as Scarlatti often used it to indicate articulation. Triple time was indicated then with an extra
 beam (e.g. 3 beams for triplet 16ths) compared to today's practise - this has been modernised.
 (In a few instances, I have had to simplify Scarlatti's beaming in complex passages to make
 the score legible with modern typesetting.)
 <p>
 Scarlatti wrote almost all note heads with separate stems, as if they were separate voices,
 even when they obviously aren't. Close-spaced notes of identical length that sound as chords
 are stemmed together here for clarity. Hopefully, you will find the result visually matches
 the hand motions required to play them, and clearer to read than the original. When such
 chords cross staves, the original beaming is usually shown only on one staff (usually the
 lower), not all over both as Scarlatti did, for clarity in reading. In some cases, notes in
 the Parma manuscript have been lengthened by converting a solid note to an open one, or
 adding a dot. Since these changes are essentially all in the direction of converting the
 notation from a part-oriented one to an as-played one, and appear to have been done at the
 time, I have used the modified durations - this is a player's edition.
 <p>
 Scarlatti used what is now interpreted as a double-sided repeat bar (:||:) to end both the first
 and second halves of almost all of his sonatas. He was so meticulous about writing all
 repeated passages out in full that I consider that the :||: bar was used primarily as an
 ornamental device. In order to avoid confusion with modern use of the symbol, I have used a
 plain double bar to separate the first half from the second, and an end bar to end each whole
 sonata. Occasionally, a single bar, often of fractional length or containing solely the part for
 one clef, is enclosed in :| and |: brackets between the first and second half. These are obviously
 optional passages, to be used when one half is being repeated, but the usage is so inconsistent
 and sketchy that I felt it best to omit them. Readers should remember that performers were
 expected to provide graceful transitions between sections of music, cadenzas even, and not be
 rigid in their performance of this music.
 <img src="notation.jpg" align=right width=200 height=380>
 <p>
 Scarlatti's music ranges over the keyboard to such an extent that he had to write his music on a
 staff pair, using ledger lines only for middle C and for notes below the bass or above the treble
 clef limits. If one staff is used for each hand, his music becomes an illegible mess of clefs (top
 right, from the Santini copy) or ledger lines (middle right, Longo edition). If each hand change
 is marked throughout, the music also can be confusing to read (bottom right, from the
 Fitzwilliam manuscript). However, showing detailed hand dispositions by two note shapes
 works well - I am indebted to the skilled programmers of
 <a href="http://www.cs.uu.nl/people/hanwen/lilypond/">Lilypond</a>
 for agreeing to provide them for this edition. A diamond note head indicates the left hand, the
 usual oval head the right. Notes that Scarlatti did make concerning hand crossings are
 preserved in the form he wrote them, D (dritta, right) and M (manca, left), in the first example
 of their occurrence in each sonata.
 <p>
 Scarlatti showed a variety of articulation for many passages - I do the same for hand
 assignments. Readers are expected to play enough of the sonatas from this edition to be able to
 choose an effective performance style for them, and to not parrot the samples as shown. The
 right and left hand note shapes chosen have similar visual weight to facilitate this.
Usually, due to the short length of the sonatas, a single pattern of variation should be
chosen for consistent use throughout a piece for performance, using a complementary variation
for repeats if they are played. Mostly, I
 show examples that are visible to an audience. There are hundreds of other workable ones
 that are fun to use among friends, if the reader chooses.
 <p>
 Variations in hand usage and articulation imply variations in the lengths used for notes.
 Appropriate note durations in Scarlatti depend very much on the way the piece is played. In
 particular,
 <a href="http://www.geocities.com/Vienna/Studio/1714/sustain.html">lengthening notes</a>
 is an essential aspect of good harpsichord sound. But, I have a horror of editions by, in
 Thurston Dart's memorable phrase, "Herr X, amended by Dr Y, and thoroughly revised by the
 eminent pianist, Mr Z" - I have seen too many of them. Scarlatti normally set note lengths to
 form separate, although often fragmentary, voices rather than to prescribe the length to be
 played. Some must be modified on a single-manual instrument. Some must also be modified
 to match the hand disposition chosen. His durations are perfectly legible to the modern reader,
 so I leave it to you to turn them into music as he did, on your instrument, in your
 surroundings, as you play it.
 <p>
 Scarlatti generally used the same notation for acciaccatura and appoggiatura - a small 1/32nd
 note. Since modern players are mostly unaccustomed to the distinction, I have written them as
 they should be played, according to my judgement. Those I interpret as acciaccaturas are
 written as simultaneously struck full-length notes - Scarlatti often wrote them as such when
 they formed part of chords. Those I interpret as appoggiaturas are realised in the standard
 baroque manner. Both such usages appear with a smaller note head than the rest of the text, as
 Scarlatti wrote them, to indicate that they should not be played rigidly as written.
 <p>
 Scarlatti used the baroque trill symbol and <i>tr</i>, for tremulo, apparently interchangeably
 as a general sign for a note to be stressed. Since modern players are accustomed to play trills
 in the later classical manner, I have used the baroque symbol throughout. The symbol usually
 means a trill, starting on the upper note and not terminated by a turn - Scarlatti wrote most
 terminations out using 1/32nd notes. However, it can instead imply an acciaccatura,
 appoggiatura, inverted mordant (several of which appear in other copies of the sonatas made at
 the time), short trill, or nothing at all, depending on the context, the instrument used, its
 acoustic surroundings, and the tempo of performance. So, an editor cannot pre-choose their
 performance. Players who wish performance examples are referred to my
 <a href="http://www.geocities.com/Vienna/Studio/1714/scarlattirec.html">recordings</a>.
 <p>
 Accidentals here follow modern usage - an accidental continues until the end of the bar.
 Scarlatti normally used a flat to cancel a key signature sharp, but a natural to cancel a key
 signature flat. Sometimes, a natural was used to cancel an accidental preceding it in the bar,
 but usually accidentals were written on each affected note and did not apply to other notes.
 However, when space was tight, and it was considered obvious to a player of the time what the
 proper pitch was, accidentals were omitted. I have used my best judgement to interpret
 ambiguous cases. Scarlatti's E# and B# are replaced by F and C respectively, following
 modern practise. I have retained Scarlatti's other enharmonics (i.e. Eb vs. D#) except when it
 would impair legibility of the music with modern notation.
 <p>
 For the few sonatas apparently intended for violin and continuo, I have provided a realization
 suitable for my violin and harpsichord playing. Despite the thousands of pages written on the
 subject, there is only one real 'rule' for realizing a continuo - it should make the soloist sound
 fantastic. That depends so much on the instruments, surrounding acoustics and social
 ambiance that no editor can do it for you. In form it can range from totally self-effacing
 support to a full-blown trio sonata for solist and harpsichord or gamba. You should adapt the
 examples I give, or write your own, for your performances.
 <p>
 <a href="mailto:bf250@freenet.carleton.ca">John Sankey</a>
 <br><a href="http://www.geocities.com/Vienna/Studio/1714/harpsichord.html">Harpsichordist to the Internet</a>
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