Ralph R. Hall
[email protected]
Ralph R. Hall
http://www.brasshausmusic.com

Dear Bob (Dickow),

I am ambivalent about teaching, or giving hope to, someone not 100%  
physically equipped for both the physical and musical demands of any  
instrument, not just the horn, which does demand the use of the right  
arm.

I say hope but I really mean 'false' hope in the case of someone maybe  
wanting to enter the profession.

Obviously there are all sorts of caveats about writing on a subject  
like this but at least I have some experience. When I joined the BBC  
orchestra in Wales in the early '70's, the 3rd player was a young lady  
whose LEFT arm terminated just below the elbow. Without re-opening the  
debate about playing next to timps, playing bell to bell was the most  
uncomfortable experience. Nor, I have to say, was the intonation of  
the section helped by someone whose tuning was inflexible. I insisted,  
from my lowly position as 2nd horn, that we sat two and two, but the  
intonation issue was left unresolved until she moved on.

The point I would like to make is that, no matter how perfect the  
individuals intonation is, we do not spend our playing lives in a  
bubble - we have to constantly adjust to others and in the case of the  
horn this is usually done with the right hand in the bell. In fact, I  
say to my pupils that the right hand is the instrument's fifth valve,  
so important is it. And all this without discussing tonal  
considerations.

If there is 'hope' of this young lady becoming a very good player, a  
prosthesis of some kind should be investigated. It sounds to me as if  
she is under the care of an intelligent and considerate teacher and,  
naturally, I wish her all the good fortune she deserves.

Sincerely, Ralph






_______________________________________________
post: [email protected]
unsubscribe or set options at 
https://pegasus.memphis.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/options/horn/archive%40jab.org

Reply via email to