Wow, how good must be your orchestra as they do a concert
with two or three rehearsals ONLY, while world class
orchestras have five to six rehearsals (public dress
rehearsal included) for a concert program .
Not in Britain they don't! British orchestras are perpetually broke and
Here in South Carolina, USA, it is much the same
way. My wife, also a horn player, has one
rehearsal this coming Saturday, with the concert on
Sunday. It's very common for that type of thing in
this area. In fact, I've played a few concerts with
no rehearsals!
It's all about saving money
Can anyone out there explain why the intonation is lower when playing off
the leg than when resting the bell on the leg?
--
Dan McCartney
___
post: horn@music.memphis.edu
unsubscribe or set options at
In a message dated 12/7/2005 7:16:08 A.M. Central Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Can anyone out there explain why the intonation is lower when playing off
the leg than when resting the bell on the leg?
Maybe in your case your hand position changes a little when you raise the
Not me. (I was in the Air Force Band).
Regards,
Joe
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of Hans
Sent: Wednesday, December 07, 2005 1:14 AM
To: 'The Horn List'
Subject: RE: [Hornlist] New Nutcracker Suite for Wind Quintet
You are also a fan of
You will feel so much better after the operation! I taught many horn players in
my 31 year career at Mansfield University in Pennsylvania. Several developed
this health problem and had a hard time doing anything well, let alone playing
horn. They all reported improvement in their playing and
May-be it is the changed distance between ear bell-hole
...
Or, did your tuning slide get lose when lifting up the horn
from the on the leg position ..
Or, did you change the mouthpiece for both positions ...
.(who knows ...)
Or did you change soimething else on the instrument, when
Dan McCartney wrote:
Can anyone out there explain why the intonation is lower when
playing off the leg than when resting the bell on the leg?
Have you confirmed this change in intonation with an electronic tuner? It
may be that the tone color is different and subjectively 'feels' different
Rebecca, it does not interfer with your teaching, off
course. But it is not so good, if you play the first two
weeks after the removal of the tonsills as the increased air
pressure in your mouth might result in after bleeding
which is not without danger. I had this once, when I got my
tonsills
If there is a change, I would expect it to result from a change of
right hand position in the bell. Use ears to listen and adjust to
correct any deviation from pitch center.
Paul Mansur
On Wednesday, December 7, 2005, at 08:15 AM, Dan McCartney wrote:
Can anyone out there explain why the
Thank you for clarifying your own personal level of expertise on this subject.
I think I'll continue to use these products in the ways that I've adopted over
the years based on my own successful experience.
Good sense should tell you that if you're polishing something, you're trying to
May-be it is the changed distance between ear bell-hole
...
Or, did your tuning slide get lose when lifting up the horn
from the on the leg position ..
Or, did you change the mouthpiece for both positions ...
.(who knows ...)
Or did you change soimething else on the instrument, when
This IS NOT one of those Cheap Imititations of the Selman!
(from a current Ebay ad)
___
post: horn@music.memphis.edu
unsubscribe or set options at
http://music2.memphis.edu/mailman/options/horn/archive%40jab.org
This sounds too familiar. It is too bad that pep band is a requirement,
and your director is probably succumbing to the pressure of providing
entertainment in order to justify the program. I see this all too
often. I don't want to jump to any conclusions here, as he/she might
actually think
14 matches
Mail list logo