Me too, i have to add One Experience in Sao Paulo few Weeks ago in a 5 Star Hotel there. I bought me a 24 hrs Internet Access for 7.-USD. You Know what Happen ? They Turned off the Router between 11:00 PM and 07:00 AM ...... Nothing to add to such stupidity & ignorance ....
Von meinem iPad gesendet Am 08.06.2011 um 07:11 schrieb Hans Pizka <[email protected]>: > Hello John, > > The Problem is just, that Most Latinos are INFLEXIBLE and UNWILLING to adopt > anything from > The OTHER WORLD. That is my Experience. But there are exceptions. Who > remembers Antonio Iervolinos very interesting Horn method ? Made with His > Best intentions > But impractical . > > Von meinem iPad gesendet > > Am 07.06.2011 um 22:08 schrieb John Baumgart <[email protected]>: > >> Sounds like little blue brackets with "citation needed" are called for in >> this case. Or perhaps a "disputed information" tag. >> >> If he were to publish something that contained a lot of fingering >> information, would he notate fingerings under his "thumb = F horn" rule, or >> under what he admits is the traditional setting? Would he feel compelled to >> footnote his fingerings with his non-traditional assertion? Are there >> parallels to be drawn in etudes of yore written with ascending 3rd valve >> horns in mind? >> >> I'll also disagree that "T" should necessarily be avoided, as someone can >> easily be told what it means, just as the 'pp' dynamic does not mean "plenty >> powerful." What should be used in its place? Besides, fingering notations >> typically are very limited in practical use, mostly to: >> >> 1) Introductory instruction, in which case the teacher should know what he >> is doing enough to explain what a fingering notation means. >> 2) Indication that an exercise is to be played on all one fingering, in >> which case it should be obvious to the reader what the fingering means (once >> again, are exercises written for ascending 3rd valve horns explicitly so >> noted?) >> 3) A personalized reminder that a passage is best fingered in a specific >> way, in which case I can use whatever notation is best for me, because the >> next person is likely to erase it and put their own reminder there. >> >> John Baumgart >> >> ----- Original Message ----- >> From: "Dan Phillips" <[email protected]> >> To: "The Horn List" <[email protected]> >> Sent: Tuesday, June 7, 2011 8:46:16 AM >> Subject: [Hornlist] Interesting IHS Forum post >> >> Ricardo Matoshinos has made an interesting post on the IHS Forum >> (http://www.hornsociety.org/en/network/ihs-forum) about notation of horn >> fingerings using T to indicate Bb horn. He makes the following statement: >> >> "Today most of the world play mostly in Bb-F horn instead of the traditional >> F-Bb so now in fact thumb means F horn..." >> >> While I certainly agree that T notation is ambiguous and should, for that >> reason, be avoided in any kind of international context, I wonder if the >> above statement is true? >> >> IHS members, feel free to comment directly in the thread on the forum :-) >> >> Dan >> >> ==================== >> Dan Phillips >> Associate Professor >> Rudi E. Scheidt School of Music >> University of Memphis >> www.prizmensemble.com >> >> _______________________________________________ >> post: [email protected] >> unsubscribe or set options at >> https://pegasus.memphis.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/options/horn/john.baumgart%40comcast.net >> >> _______________________________________________ >> 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/hpizka%40me.com _______________________________________________ post: [email protected] unsubscribe or set options at https://pegasus.memphis.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/options/horn/archive%40jab.org
