Non-MS/orchestration question

• Feb 9, 2020 - 15:22

Referring to the 'cello/bass line in the attached, should one take the "UNITI" direction to mean the 'cellos and basses are to be in the same octave or instead for the basses to be an octave lower than the 'cellos?
One would typically expect the basses to be an octave lower in this writing, but the "UNITI" direction might indicate otherwise. I've never seen any kind of unison direction in this particular scenario; usually having both 'cello and bass indicated to the left of the left-side bracket means they are an octave apart as sounded.
(This is from Verdi's opera Don Carlo, the Act IV duet between King Philip and the Grand Inquisitor.)
Thanks,

Attachment Size
Don Carlo duet.PNG 100.43 KB

Comments

My opinion:
The composer (or Transcriber) said "UNITI/Unified(?)" because he wrote both instruments to the same staff.
Every part (Cellos, Contrabasses) will play whatever they see in the score on their instruments. And naturally, the Contrabasses will be heard from an octave below.

A score shouldn't expect any player to transpose a part themselves, so I think contrabasses will still be playing an octave lower. Maybe the parts (staves) of cellos and basses are separate on the previous system and get unified here.

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