It is also transposed to E-flat for a mezzosoprano, to D for everybody & to C for a baritone. I did it in C with worlfdfamous liedsinger baritone Hermann Prey. But I think it is rather a question of the text, to use a female voice instead a male voice .......
Horn in E is the original key. ######################################################################################### Am 24.08.2010 um 19:23 schrieb Daniel Canarutto: > On 24Aug 2010, at 17:21 , David A. Jewell wrote: > >> According to the collected works publication it only says >> "singstimme" which I >> looked up and it means "singing voice" so although I am biased in >> favor of >> tenors, there is no indication that a soprano isn't appropriate >> either. >> Paxmaha > > That's interesting. In the edition I have (I don't remember which it > is, and I'm at work now) I read "horn in E". Is that the original > indication? Isn't it usually played with horn in D when the singer is > a tenor? > > Daniel > _______________________________________________ > post: [email protected] > unsubscribe or set options at > https://pegasus.memphis.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/options/horn/hpizka%40me.com _______________________________________________ post: [email protected] unsubscribe or set options at https://pegasus.memphis.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/options/horn/archive%40jab.org
