The single (wildly-rushed, but there were a bunch of folks to herd on/off stage, and it was very well-planned/run) rehearsal was Friday, two shows yesterday, a run-out today, and done with this show.
I'm heading up to Dyersburg, TN (mostly, on back roads) for the run-out. I don't think that's going to be quite far enough north to see any tornado damage, fwiw.
The orchestra is busing a bunch of the musicians up, but - were I to drive to where that bus is going to be parked - I would already be (in equivalent time) about halfway to the venue...and the bus pokes along, makes a restroom/snack stop on the way there-and-back, etc., etc...
I discovered that this arrangement of "The Christmas Song" features no trumpets nor trombones...thus the trombone-range solo lick in the tuba part. The euphonium is the perfect choice for that lick. Some of the percussionists and string players asked, "What's that?"
Per what I've always tried to tell everyone about orchestra music directors, he said nothing, and never even looked at me.
- Play what's written (or - if mistakes - play what SHOULD be written).
- Play it close to in-tune.
- Play it with everyone else (neither early nor late).
- Don't play in the rests.
- "Nice sound" and "phrasing" are bonuses - but only acknowledged by colleagues (never by MD's).
MD's never give a damn "what type of tuba" is being used.
I'm "with" the horns...who are "way-way over there".
principal horn:
"Wow...I
loved that really-really loud place in that one tune...
(NOT the tune discussed in this thread)
me:
"hmm...Which one?"
principal horn:
"I can't remember."
me:
"I'll try to remember to play just as loud on that not-remembered tune."
bloke "The David Clydesdale arrangement of "O Holy Night (with an exclamation mark after the title)" is absurdly heavy-handed and over-written. I can't stand it, but I will play it very well, for money. The soprano - who's singing it, this time - has a WONDERFUL set of pipes...It's a shame they didn't use the John Rutter (or just about any other) setting."