Which ones do you have, just out of interest? My favourite tends to be the old English Concert set with Pinnock. Although I quite like the Freiburg Barockorchester (von der Goltz) DVD version, too. Again I can't say if it's a tuning/intonation thing or merely the kind of sonorities the smaller ensemble produces, the certain -erm- abrasive quality and briskness & crispness of playing that I've come to enjoy through many other English Concert recordings too (notably the Handel Concerti Grossi). Recording can also play a part in this, of course. I rather enjoy relatively "close" recordings, without excessive concert hall ambience/echo.AldenG wrote:I have some Brandenburgs on ancient instruments that have distinctive intonation
Yep, to look for scientific or mathematic perfection in music sounds more that a bit silly to me. Granted, there may be some Pythagorean joys in store for them who like to analyse music down to the last minutiae, but it's really not what makes music interesting and magical IMO, and -to put it bluntly- I couldn't care less.AldenG wrote:For piano trios, my frame of comparison would likely be the andante movement of Beethoven's Archduke trio. Of course I've never heard it in anything but ET, but in ET it sounds like harmonic perfection. I don't mean scientific perfection, I mean aesthetic perfection. D major is a great key for it....
At the same time, I can't say I'd be able to analyse the differences between keys or modalities in the way you can... in terms of shimmer, or anything like that. Was it Pablo Casals who gave each of Bach's Cello suites some "metaphysical" characteristics based on the keys in which they were written? Be as it may, I'm happy enough to go for zen-like "wordless" enjoyment of those works; maybe it's somehow amateurish or "childish", perhaps I'm missing something by way of Grand Design of things... but I don't mind.
