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THE ROLE OF TURKISH PERCUSSION IN THE HISTORY AND ...

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to the pianoforte as an optional attachment to the pedal struck with the left foot, allowing a<br />

pianist to supplement solo or chamber works with the color of the Turkish music. Wolfgang<br />

A. Mozart (Sonata in A Major, 1778), Leopold Mozart (A Turkish Piece, pre-1787), and<br />

Muzio Clementi (Twelve Waltzes for the Pianoforte with accompaniment for tambourine and<br />

triangle, 1796), are some of the composers who included this attachment that became known<br />

as the Turkish pedal in works for the pianoforte during the late eighteenth century. Such<br />

innovations not only increased European awareness and the popularity of Turkish music, but<br />

also may have made a decided impression on orchestral composers during that period. 2<br />

The orchestral works of the eighteenth century were available for purchase in separate<br />

parts or by basic sets. With an eye to affordability, the quantity of parts was kept low, and<br />

separate parts for woodwinds, horns, trumpets, and drums were commonly available in<br />

manuscript rather than in engraved copies. Often the title page of a musical work would note<br />

the availability of parts for double bass, trumpet, and drums for supplemental purchase.<br />

These parts were provided only by direct contact with the manuscript copyist. Even when<br />

percussion parts were extant, they sometimes included only skeletal notations, leaving an<br />

incomplete impression of how the work may have sounded when performed by the larger<br />

orchestras of that era. 3 This practice strengthens the opinion of certain researchers who<br />

believe the designation of bass drum also implied the simultaneous playing of other<br />

percussion instruments such as cymbals in situations where no single percussion instrument<br />

was scored to play alone.<br />

2 Francis W. Galpin, European Musical Instruments, (London: Williams and Norgate, Ltd., 1946), 68. quoted in<br />

Gangware, The History and Use of Percussion Instruments in Orchestration, 198.<br />

3 Moore, “How Turkish Janizary Band Music Started Our Modern Percussion Section,” 11-12.<br />

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