The transcriptions of Vienna Percussion Editions are conceived both as performable repertoire and as analytical study material.
The detailed notation enables close engagement with melody, harmony, and timing, with a particular focus on the playing approaches of Gary Burton and Makoto Ozone.
The aim is to translate recorded performances into a clear and readable notation without compromising playability.
Transcription is understood as a precise editorial process based on detailed analysis of all musical parameters in recorded performances.
Recordings often contain musical information that cannot be fully captured through conventional notation — such as micro-timing, damping techniques, or subtle transitions between free and metrically defined passages.
The editorial approach of Vienna Percussion Editions aims to make these aspects readable without overloading the score. Musical decisions are clarified where they significantly shape the character of the performance, while unnecessary complexity is avoided.
Each transcription is revised with regard to playability and musical logic, ensuring that the notation functions both as a reliable performance edition and as a tool for detailed analysis.
Audio examples use computer-generated sound derived directly from the notation.
Obvious inconsistencies in the original recording are addressed where musically necessary. The original material remains visible, ensuring transparency of editorial decisions.
Complex harmonic layers are notated in a way that preserves their vertical clarity while remaining readable in performance.
Sections with independent rhythmic layers are notated to clearly distinguish strict time from freely floating material.
Deliberate shifts between laid-back phrasing and strict time are clearly indicated, allowing performers to reproduce subtle timing nuances without ambiguity.
The formal architecture of each piece is clearly indicated, supporting orientation within extended forms.
Sticking and damping indications for vibraphone are provided where they are either clearly derived from the source or musically essential.
The aim is not to enforce fixed solutions, but to clarify sound-related decisions that influence articulation, resonance, and phrasing.