Re: [Hornlist] Beginning Horn Methods

2009-06-17 Thread Chris Wilhjelm
Marc, 
I have always liked the Belwin Student Method (the green book) and if you can 
find it the old Universal Method for French Horn. 

One book which I absolutely believe in is Primary Studies for French Horn by 
Anton Horner.  This is NOT a beginner book but rather a good method for 
students switching to horn from trumpet etc or for students who have progressed 
through the beginning material (also very good for serious older students who 
can progress quickly) 
c

 Marc Zyla m...@andrew.cmu.edu 6/16/2009 12:53 PM 
Hello All,
I am starting a doctoral teaching fellowship at the University 
of
Illinois, and as a part of my fellowship I am responsible for teaching
horn methods to music education majors. I have thought up an assignment
for my class that will require the students become familiar with several
beginner method books.  My question to the horn list community is what
are some great beginner method books that I might not be familiar with
and I should check out.  When I was a young horn player I was brought up
through the old Rubank method books for band, as well as Essential
Elements and Standard of Excellence.  Throughout my private teaching I
have come across another great book, the Boosey Brass Method. What might
be some other books that some of you all might use and I should
incorporate into my class? I appreciate any feedback you might have.

Thank you,
Marc Zyla
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
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Re: [Hornlist] Beginning Horn Methods

2009-06-17 Thread Steve Freides
On Tue, Jun 16, 2009 at 1:15 PM, Chris
Wilhjelmcwilhj...@pascack.k12.nj.us wrote:
 Marc,
 I have always liked the Belwin Student Method (the green book) and if you can 
 find it the old Universal Method for French Horn.

Chris, is this the Belwin book you mean:

http://www.sheetmusicplus.com/title/Belwin-21st-Century-Band-Method-Level-1/1415121

or this:

http://www.sheetmusicplus.com/title/Belwin-Band-Builder-Part-1/1429147

or neither of those - the one that had a green cover didn't show a
version for Horn in F, just for Baritone.

Thanks in advance.

-S-
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Re: [Hornlist] Beginning Horn Methods

2009-06-16 Thread Ellie Jenkins
I really like the The French Horn Student books (3 volumes) by 
James Ployhar, along with Robert Getchell's First and Second Book of 
Practical Studies. The Getchell's make great transposition workbooks 
later on, too.

Ellie




Hello All,
   I am starting a doctoral teaching fellowship at the University of
Illinois, and as a part of my fellowship I am responsible for teaching
horn methods to music education majors. I have thought up an assignment
for my class that will require the students become familiar with several
beginner method books.  My question to the horn list community is what
are some great beginner method books that I might not be familiar with
and I should check out.  When I was a young horn player I was brought up
through the old Rubank method books for band, as well as Essential
Elements and Standard of Excellence.  Throughout my private teaching I
have come across another great book, the Boosey Brass Method. What might
be some other books that some of you all might use and I should
incorporate into my class? I appreciate any feedback you might have.

Thank you,
Marc Zyla
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
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Re: [Hornlist] Beginning Horn Methods

2009-06-16 Thread daniel . canarutto

Hi,
for my daughter I'm using Hornschule by Fritz Huth (I'm not absolutely  
certain about the name, I can check later at home). I got advise about  
this method by a top level German hornist.

I'm sure that that there are many, many others.
Daniel

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Re: [Hornlist] Beginning Horn Methods

2009-06-16 Thread Howard Sanner

Quoting Marc Zyla:



Hello All,
I am starting a doctoral teaching fellowship at the University
of
Illinois, and as a part of my fellowship I am responsible for teaching
horn methods to music education majors. I have thought up an assignment
for my class that will require the students become familiar with several
beginner method books.  My question to the horn list community is what
are some great beginner method books that I might not be familiar with
and I should check out.  When I was a young horn player I was brought up
through the old Rubank method books for band, as well as Essential
Elements and Standard of Excellence.  Throughout my private teaching I
have come across another great book, the Boosey Brass Method. What might
be some other books that some of you all might use and I should
incorporate into my class? I appreciate any feedback you might have.

Thank you,
Marc Zyla
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign


I started with the two books of the Pottag-Hovey Method, and then went  
to Horner's Primary Studies. After that it was Kopprasch and the other  
usual suspects.


I suggest doing some searches of online library catalogs (e.g.,  
http://catalog.loc.gov) and browsing library shelves under the  
following class numbers, in probable approximate order of helpfulness.  
I put the caption for each number from the classification schedule  
(2007 ed.--the latest) in parentheses.


MT422 (Systems and methods)
MT428 (Self-instructors)
MT425 (Studies and exercises)
MT420 (General works)

I also suggest searching the following subject headings, again in  
approximate order of probable usefulness:


Horn (Musical instrument)--Methods
Horn (Musical instrument)--Studies and exercises
Horn (Musical instrument)--Studies and exercises (Jazz)
Horn (Musical instrument)--Instruction and study

For reasons too complex to get into here, I strongly suspect the  
Library of Congress's online catalog (URL above) does not list all of  
the Library's holdings of this material. In addition, experience shows  
that no matter how many library catalogs or other sources you search  
under what headings, someone out there will still know about a work  
that hasn't otherwise surfaced.


HTH.

Howard Sanner
hornl...@terrier.ampexguy.com
definitely writing as a private citizen and not speaking for my employer


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RE: [Hornlist] Beginning Horn Methods

2009-06-16 Thread bangs

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Re: [Hornlist] Beginning Horn Methods

2009-06-16 Thread lewhorn9
I concur with the Getchell studies. They are excellent in my opinion. I like 
the fact that he exposes the student to key signatures they normally don't see 
in traditional band programs. Getchell also makes good use of changing rhythms 
within an etude. He first might show a student a pattern with a half and two 
quarters in a four four bar, and then will vary the rhythm making the student 
have to count. I kid with my students that when they miss these patterns, that 
they've been Getchelled. 

Walt Lewis
--Original Message--
From: Ellie Jenkins
Sender: horn-bounces+lewhorn9=yahoo@music.memphis.edu
To: The Horn List
ReplyTo: The Horn List
Subject: Re: [Hornlist] Beginning Horn Methods
Sent: Jun 16, 2009 1:33 PM

I really like the The French Horn Student books (3 volumes) by 
James Ployhar, along with Robert Getchell's First and Second Book of 
Practical Studies. The Getchell's make great transposition workbooks 
later on, too.
Ellie



Hello All,
I am starting a doctoral teaching fellowship at the University of
Illinois, and as a part of my fellowship I am responsible for teaching
horn methods to music education majors. I have thought up an assignment
for my class that will require the students become familiar with several
beginner method books.  My question to the horn list community is what
are some great beginner method books that I might not be familiar with
and I should check out.  When I was a young horn player I was brought up
through the old Rubank method books for band, as well as Essential
Elements and Standard of Excellence.  Throughout my private teaching I
have come across another great book, the Boosey Brass Method. What might
be some other books that some of you all might use and I should
incorporate into my class? I appreciate any feedback you might have.

Thank you,
Marc Zyla
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
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