Exposition

The Evolution of Portamento in Cello Playing Since the First Recordings (2025)

Mathias Pearson
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This research investigates the historical evolution of portamento, or expressive shifting, in cello performance by comparing early 20th-century recordings with contemporary interpretations. The subject was inspired by the striking interpretation observed in Beatrice Harrison's 1920 recording of Elgar's Cello Concerto, where portamento was employed with frequency and expressiveness unlike the recordings I had heard before. The methodology involves analyzing historical recordings of "The Swan" from Saint-Saëns' Le Carnaval des Animaux, annotating portamento occurrences in scores, and comparing them with modern performances. Recordings by cellists such as Kronold, Schwiller, Hollman, and Casals were examined alongside contemporary cellists like Yo-Yo Ma and Johannes Moser. The analysis shows patterns in portamento frequency, variation and use of expressive tools across different periods. The findings suggest a significant decline in the use and variety of portamento in modern cello playing, and shifts in aesthetic preferences as advancements in recording technology are made. Early 20th century cellists employed portamento not just not only where it is convenient, but as an integral expressive tool alongside vibrato and timing, mirroring the approach of vocalists at the time. After exploring portamento in my own practice, I can conclude that the notion of consciously experimenting with portamento can enhance interpretative variety and expressiveness, leading to a more deeply personal voice. This study encourages cellists to explore portamento as a legitimate expressive tool in modern cello performance to enrich musical expression.
typeresearch exposition
keywords19th century, Cello, portamento, historical recordings, 20th century, interpretation, expression
date20/11/2023
published14/07/2025
last modified14/07/2025
statuslimited publication
copyrightMathias Schwaiger Pearson
licenseAll rights reserved
languageEnglish
urlhttps://www.researchcatalogue.net/view/2388817/2388818
published inKC Research Portal
portal issue3. Internal publication


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comments: 1 (last entry by Anna Scott - 03/03/2025 at 16:05)