brass choir concert - encore - Easy Button(s)
Posted: Sun Oct 04, 2020 8:39 pm
In less than two weeks, there's an brass choir concert - under the auspices of an orchestra, of which the players are members.
The encore (not listed on the program) is Star & Stripes, Forever.
This arrangement features the tuba (covering the piccolo solo/soli in the trio)...ha-ha-ha...
I was thinking of using my Besson E-flat recording bass on that number (as a hoot) and then (duh!) began to realize how incredibly EASY that little solo is on E-flat tuba (vs. F - which I've used in the distant past (when I've played that same passage - as an F tuba offers good trills with alternate fingerings involving the 5th and 6th valves)...
...but I'm not that great of an E-flat reader (OK...I know how it goes - and can nearly fake the whole thing...but I'd RATHER read it...
Then (I'm so dang dumb) I suddenly remembered that I can play it as if "in C", reading "trumpet treble clef" (which I can read VERY well)...
...so I read though this, and (its a cinch) that's exactly what I'm going to do.
The only very minor trip-ups (reading thing it the first time) were when I needed to use the (left-hand) 4th valve for some of the trills (as trumpets usually don't have a 4th valves)...but two or three more times though it (perhaps a pencil-mark or two...??) and it's ready-and-done.
Again...WHY PRACTICE when there's an EASIER TUBA...??
bloke "...and now I PARTICULARLY understand the value - in the heyday of wind bands - of the D-flat piccolos ! "
with apologies for the phone-pic, instead of an honest-to-goodness scan...
The encore (not listed on the program) is Star & Stripes, Forever.
This arrangement features the tuba (covering the piccolo solo/soli in the trio)...ha-ha-ha...
I was thinking of using my Besson E-flat recording bass on that number (as a hoot) and then (duh!) began to realize how incredibly EASY that little solo is on E-flat tuba (vs. F - which I've used in the distant past (when I've played that same passage - as an F tuba offers good trills with alternate fingerings involving the 5th and 6th valves)...
...but I'm not that great of an E-flat reader (OK...I know how it goes - and can nearly fake the whole thing...but I'd RATHER read it...
Then (I'm so dang dumb) I suddenly remembered that I can play it as if "in C", reading "trumpet treble clef" (which I can read VERY well)...
...so I read though this, and (its a cinch) that's exactly what I'm going to do.
The only very minor trip-ups (reading thing it the first time) were when I needed to use the (left-hand) 4th valve for some of the trills (as trumpets usually don't have a 4th valves)...but two or three more times though it (perhaps a pencil-mark or two...??) and it's ready-and-done.
Again...WHY PRACTICE when there's an EASIER TUBA...??
bloke "...and now I PARTICULARLY understand the value - in the heyday of wind bands - of the D-flat piccolos ! "
with apologies for the phone-pic, instead of an honest-to-goodness scan...