In the second movement of Poulenc’s Clarinet Sonata, Romanza, the clarinet becomes a singer.
As Yoonah Kim explains, Poulenc’s writing is shaped like a vocal aria: full of rhetorical questions, aching pauses, and whispered confessions between phrases.
In this lesson segment, Kim demonstrates how to let the line breathe, embracing rubato and freedom rather than metronomic precision. She also shares a valuable technique for smoothing the throat-tone transitions across the break by keeping the right-hand keys pressed...a small adjustment that transforms the sound into a seamless legato.
This approach turns Romanza into more than a study in phrasing: it becomes a workshop for musical storytelling.
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