{"id":5206,"date":"2020-01-19T20:30:24","date_gmt":"2020-01-19T20:30:24","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/orchestrationonline.com\/?p=5206"},"modified":"2020-10-25T19:44:03","modified_gmt":"2020-10-25T19:44:03","slug":"orchestration-tip-bisbigliando-is-vewy-vewy-quiet","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/orchestrationonline.com\/orchestration-tip-bisbigliando-is-vewy-vewy-quiet\/","title":{"rendered":"Orchestration Tip: Bisbigliando is Vewy Vewy Quiet!"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
(Tip no. 75 from 100 MORE Orchestration Tips, to be released March 2020)<\/p>\n\n\n\n
No matter how much a composer might wish otherwise, harpists simply cannot play bisbigliando loudly.<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n Most of the tips in this book and in the original 100 Orchestration Tips are about things you won\u2019t find in orchestration manuals; or about things that the manuals do cover, but not in sufficient detail to fully grasp the player\u2019s perspective. This is not intended as a slight against orchestration manuals, by the way, which can be enormously useful for reference and basic information; but merely stating why there needs to be information such as you\u2019ll find in my tips.<\/p>\n\n\n\n Every so often, though, I find myself writing tips that underline what\u2019s said in the manuals \u2013 mainly because I\u2019m seeing how frequently some basic information isn\u2019t always accepted or paid much heed. The chief culprit in this regard? Harp bisbigliando. Time and again, a composer will score a work in progress for review which marks mf, f, or even ff along with a marking of bisbigliando, in places where the harp must be loud in order to properly function in a given texture.<\/p>\n\n\n\n The honest truth, though, is that bisbigliando simply cannot be played loudly. The Italian term literally translates as \u201cwhispering.\u201d And thus is its maximum dynamic: the loudest one could expect from the effect would be a stage whisper, not even noticeable compared to an average note played by any other instrument, and in fact useless in any kind of orchestral texture louder than pianissimo. Piston calls this \u201ca kind of delicate rustling motion\u2026appropriate to soft nuances.\u201d Other manuals say nearly the same thing. When it\u2019s used in the appropriate fashion, the effect is haunting and unforgettable. <\/p>\n\n\n\n But why can\u2019t this effect be pushed up in volume to be as loud as the composer might want? To answer that, we must delve into the mechanics of the effect. Usually the player\u2019s hands alternate two enharmonically equivalent chords, giving the illusion that the same chord is being repeated at quite a rapid tremolo. There\u2019s usually a slight arpeggiando effect to this, almost as if the chords are being stroked softly as if petting a cat rather than plucked in alternating blocks. This adds to the mystery, and also helps the effect feel more randomised.<\/p>\n\n\n\n The whole effect is based on subtlety \u2013 so much so that when it\u2019s pushed, the result is a snarling, jolted mess. There are several reasons for this, but the most basic limitation is simply technical. The fingers simply can\u2019t alternate plucking in this way with so much force. It\u2019s not like lifting and dropping the wrists to hammer away at a piano chord trill. That\u2019s not how the hands work across harp strings. And even were it possible, then strings so quickly and loudly repeated would end up \u201cstomping,\u201d with an ugly buzz with every new pluck. So regrettably, bisbigliando played with any kind of force is outside the technique of the concert harpist.<\/p>\n\n\n\n