The interesting discussion so far has been whether normal players should
mostly stick with a double, or whether it makes sense to walk on stage
daily with a triple.  Although I have previously contributed to the
triple thread, I'd like to shut it down out of embarassment with this
post.

It is certainly true that many skilled players use triples these days.
Someday some brasswhacker will invent a quadruple horn, and these same
artists will rush out to buy one.  Meanwhile, I call your attention to
these two youtube links:

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rs3UtfOpi1k

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=neq0xsvaRUQ&feature=related

The second link has a helpful follow-along horn part, but the first is
more impressive, despite being a noisy poor-quality dub from vinyl.  It
wasn't played on a triple.  It wasn't played on a double.  It wasn't
even played on a single.  Evidence is that it was played on a steenking
Bb alto baroque horn without valves.  You tripleholics may have to wait until
someone invents a quintuple horn before any of you replaces Baumann...
_______________________________________________
post: [email protected]
unsubscribe or set options at 
https://pegasus.memphis.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/options/horn/archive%40jab.org

Reply via email to