Re: [Hornlist] Rutgers DMA Fellowship Available

2008-10-06 Thread Luke Zyla

Hi Doug,
My son, Marc, is finishing his masters degree at Carnegie Mellon in 
Pittsburgh.  He is studying with Bill Cabellero of the Pittsburgh Symphony. 
He is shopping for a place to earn his DMA.  I will pass this information 
along to him.

Thanks for the info,
Luke Zyla
- Original Message - 
From: "Douglas Lundeen" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

To: 
Sent: Monday, October 06, 2008 2:22 PM
Subject: [Hornlist] Rutgers DMA Fellowship Available



Dear Students and Colleagues,

Last year's announcement of scholarships on this forum received such 
strong response that I have a wonderful new class of graduate students 
this year (3MM's and one DMA).  That said, I have been informed that there 
is all likelihood of an additional DMA Fellowship being awarded to the 
horn studio.  These fellowships carry full-tuition and a $6K stipend.


Live audition is required for award of scholarship, but with the cost of 
travel these days, I would encourage you to send a CD ahead of making any 
formal commitment to audition.  Anyone who does come to audition receives 
a free sample lesson and lunch or dinner on me:)


All best wishes to the horn community,

Dr. Douglas Lundeen
Assoc. Prof. of Horn
Mason Gross School of the Arts
Rutgers University

___
post: horn@music.memphis.edu
unsubscribe or set options at 
http://music2.memphis.edu/mailman/options/horn/lzyla%40suddenlink.net 


___
post: horn@music.memphis.edu
unsubscribe or set options at 
http://music2.memphis.edu/mailman/options/horn/archive%40jab.org


[Hornlist] Dvorak Horn Solo, Part 3

2008-10-06 Thread Bear Woodson
Hello again, Hornists.

I want to thank you for these enlightening answers
and the added fact that some of you provided Horn
advice for my huge First Symphony 3 years ago. I
ended up using 6 Horns, with each pair being a High
and Low Horn, with the 6th Horn being the lowest. I
had one rowdy passage with Loud, growling Trills in
All 6 Horns, Euphonium and Tuba, each on a different
pitch. I also gave Solo Passages for nearly Every
Individual Wind Instrument, each Percussionist, the
Harp, each String Section, and the First Chair Soloists
of each String Section, because I wanted this
symphony to also be somewhat of a Concerto for
Orchestra. I finished the First Three Movements, which
already total an hour, and I have had to put work on
the complex fugal 4th Movement aside for a while.

(I've also written several large works for Horn,
including: a Sonata for Unaccompanied Horn, 17 min.;
Sonata for Four Horns, 17 min.; Sonata No. 1 for Horn
and Piano, 28 min.; and a full Concerto, 16 min. I still
need to complete the 2nd Sonata for Horn and Piano.
Each of the piano-accompanied sonatas has a Slow
Movement that is also arranged for String Accompani-
ment like a Konzertstück, about 7 minutes long, each.)

Meanwhile, thank you, Mr. Ovitsky, for this list of
Dennis Brain recordings of the Dvorak Cello Concerto.
I will look for them.

> date: Sun, 5 Oct 2008 22:30:42 -0400
> from: "DalleyHN" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> 
> . . . I played the solo for Piatagorsky and Nelsova as
> well as my mother (an excellent cellist), and my sister
> (also an excellent cellist). I played it several times at
> Interlochen with high school soloists that I can no
> longer remember . . .

If you were at Interlochen in the Late 1960's or Early
1970's, you may have played it with Louis Lowenstein,
the cello prodigy, whom I knew in those years. He went
from total cello beginner to studying with Piatigorsky in
only FIVE years! He's in the Pittsburgh Symphony for
many years now, and prefers playing Jazz Cello over
classical, when he's not doing an orchestral gig.

As for Horns, Crooks and Key Signatures, I have
never used a Key Signature in any of my Official
Instrumental works, except Cadenzas of some of the
Mozart Concerti. I use Chromatic Modal Harmony, but
it modulates so often, that to write in an Official Key
Signature and then Negate it, and write in a New Key
Signature every few bars apart, would be more confusing
that it's worth. Like many classically trained composers
for the last 100 years, I use NO Key Signature and Free
Chromatics as needed. I also make a Full C Score, a Full
Transposed Score, and even a Piano Reduction for
concerti. I put Cut Notes in all Part Books, and print
them myself, so that the Page Turns occur during long
rests for that instrument. All of this helps compensate for
the fact that nearly all of my music is Very Difficult to
Play, in a blend of Bartók, Prokofieff, Shostakovich,
Hindemith, styles. 

I remember reading years ago, that Brahms heard the
1895 Dvorak Cello Concerto and said something to the
effect of, 'if I knew a cello could do that, I would have
written a cello concerto'. (Brahms died in 1897.) Of
course Brahms had written 4 Concerti: 2 for piano, one
for violin, and a Double Concerto for Violin and Cello.
None are easy for the soloists, and there is much for him
to be proud of, in the Cello part of his Double Concerto.

I have scores of all 4 Brahms concerti and the Horn
Parts are impressive, but they seem to specify being
written for Crooks! I don't know the Dvorak symphonies
as well as I should, nor do I have scores of any them, but
he only lived into 1904.

I believe I've read that some of the Late-19th Century
composers expected Horn Players to use Valved Horns
with One Fingering to put the horn in One Key for a long
passage, or an Entire Work, and then Lip all the notes
from there. I believe that some of those composers were
NOT expecting the Horn Players to actually Change
Fingerings Often while playing. I believe that Richard
Strauß stuck exclusively to Key Signatures until his death
in 1949, but I know little about his scores and horn
writing. But it DOES speak well for the Impressive Horn
Writing by several Late-19th Century composers like
Brahms, Dvorak, and Strauß!


Bear Woodson  
Composer in Tucson, Arizona, USA

Home: 520 - 881 - 2558
"Bear Woodson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

"Aluminum foil makes a lovely hat and it blocks
out the government's mind control rays."
 - Detective John Munch (actor Richard Belzer)
to "The Lone Gunmen" ("the 3 conspiracy-freak,
computer nerds" who help Agent Fox Mulder, in
the "X-Files" "Unusual Suspects" Episode 100,
Season 5: # 3.) (Nov. 1997)
http://schwicky.net/xfiles/episodes/5/unusual_suspects/


___
post: horn@music.memphis.edu
unsubscribe or set options at 
http://music2.memphis.edu/mailman/options/horn/archive%40jab.org


[Hornlist] Re: Dvorak horn solo NHR digression

2008-10-06 Thread Steven Mumford

For the flute low B, you can always just roll up a piece of paper and stick it 
in the end with enough sticking out to give you low B.  Works fine, as long as 
you don't also have to play low C.  Same with low A on the Bassoon, which is 
written in a few pieces.  I think there's some trick of holding the bell 
against your leg to get a low A on the bari sax as well.  I heard somebody 
scoffing about those sissies who need an actual key to get that note.  
    What we need are some cool tricks to extend the range of the horn below 
pedal F#.  Somebody told me a long time ago that if you play a low note, then 
you flutter tongue at exactly the right frequency, it would cut out every other 
vibration and drop the pitch by an octave.  Still working on that one.  I'll 
let you know in a few years.  

- Steve



Bear wrote:

 I am also curious as to WHEN most composers
switched to writing for Modern Valved Horns. Dvorak
wrote this Cello Concerto in 1895, and included at least
one spot where the Second Flutist had to play the Low
B-Natural, which began being manufactured in 1877! I
would think it was a bit risky for Dvorak to expect that
all orchestras in the Late 1890's to have a "B-Foot
Extension" for their Second Flute Players (who also
have to switch to Piccolo a few times), but his Horns
are still using Crooks?!? Wasn't Wagner writing for
Valved Horns in the 1880's?

___
post: horn@music.memphis.edu
unsubscribe or set options at 
http://music2.memphis.edu/mailman/options/horn/archive%40jab.org


[Hornlist] Rutgers DMA Fellowship Available

2008-10-06 Thread Douglas Lundeen

Dear Students and Colleagues,

Last year's announcement of scholarships on this forum received such 
strong response that I have a wonderful new class of graduate students 
this year (3MM's and one DMA).  That said, I have been informed that 
there is all likelihood of an additional DMA Fellowship being awarded to 
the horn studio.  These fellowships carry full-tuition and a $6K stipend.


Live audition is required for award of scholarship, but with the cost of 
travel these days, I would encourage you to send a CD ahead of making 
any formal commitment to audition.  Anyone who does come to audition 
receives a free sample lesson and lunch or dinner on me:)


All best wishes to the horn community,

Dr. Douglas Lundeen
Assoc. Prof. of Horn
Mason Gross School of the Arts
Rutgers University

___
post: horn@music.memphis.edu
unsubscribe or set options at 
http://music2.memphis.edu/mailman/options/horn/archive%40jab.org


[Hornlist] Valve Oil Offer

2008-10-06 Thread KendallBetts
  
Dear Horn Community,
 
My teacher, Prof. I.M. Gestopftmitscheist, manufactures and bottles his own  
secret formula valve oil as well as # 5 Duralene White Machine Oil at  "The 
World's Largest Valve Oil Factory" in Bad Corner, NH.   The valve  oil is 
triple 
refined odorless kerosene based with an anti corrosive,  evaporation 
retardant  and "slickener" added.  The white oil is  for the bearings, springs, 
etc.
 
Here's the deal:
 
For a limited time, an eight oz. bottle of either is $10 plus  shipping.  
Order 12 and the 13th bottle is free!  All proceeds from  this offer go to the 
KBHC Scholarship Fund in Memory of Walter  Lawson.
 
To order, please e-mail the Professor at [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
(mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED])  with your request.   He'll get back to you with 
details regarding 
your order and payment assuming his  current community service sentence for 
promoting musical pornography at IHS 40  gives him enough time to process your 
order.
 
If you missed it, take a look at 
_http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=professor+ihs+40&search_type=&aq=0&oq=Professor+IHS_
 
(http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=professor+ihs+40&search_type=&aq=0&oq=Professor+IHS)
  and 
 you'll know why he was charged.
 
Sincerely,
 
Kendall Betts
 
 
 





 

 New MapQuest Local shows what's happening at your destination. Dining,  
Movies, Events, News & more. _Try it  out_ 
(http://local.mapquest.com/?ncid=emlcntnew0001) !




**New MapQuest Local shows what's happening at your destination.  
Dining, Movies, Events, News & more. Try it out!  
(http://local.mapquest.com/?ncid=emlcntnew0001)
___
post: horn@music.memphis.edu
unsubscribe or set options at 
http://music2.memphis.edu/mailman/options/horn/archive%40jab.org