In Orchestral-style Cue Listings which request one of these instrumentations,
SOLO PIANO
PIANO
PIANO AND STRINGS
I have heard forwards which achieve building dynamics by incorporating what seems like imaginary (i.e. physically impossible or highly unlikely) elements such as a string ensemble which suddenly grows a second or third cello, or 3 or 4 violinists, or a Solo Piano track which, in the second half of the track, suddenly grows a second piano (or a third arm for the player).
I have been interpreting Listings for SOLO PIANO as being "One and Only One Piano played by One Performer" (not "DOUBLE PIANO" or "PIANO DUET") and Listings for "PIANO AND STRINGS" to be a typical string ensemble (3, 4, or 5 players in standard, real-life configuration). I have been interpreting "PIANO" by itself to additionally mean "Solo PIANO".
Based on past forwards, this does not seem to hold, and imaginary ensembles, impossible-to-play piano, seems to be acceptable?
Current listings where this applies are S230206PX, S230207RG.
Physically playable Orchestral or Piano vs. Imaginary Orchestral or Piano
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Physically playable Orchestral or Piano vs. Imaginary Orchestral or Piano
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Re: Physically playable Orchestral or Piano vs. Imaginary Orchestral or Piano
Yeha they don't tend to mean just a piano player playing one piano
They mean that piano is the only instrument even if playing something physically impossible for those of you just the two hands.
They mean that piano is the only instrument even if playing something physically impossible for those of you just the two hands.
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