I’ve never seen this marking refer to a trill but almost always to “stopped” 
which means the right hand completely closes the opening of the bell of the 
horn.






Tim Johnson

Sent from Surface Pro





From: Kim Patrick Clow
Sent: ‎Saturday‎, ‎May‎ ‎17‎, ‎2014 ‎5‎:‎28‎ ‎PM
To: finale@shsu.edu





+"
articulation marks above them

That's a older variant for "trill"


On Sat, May 17, 2014 at 6:25 PM, Peter Taylor <pe...@euphonium.plus.com>wrote:

> Advice please.  I'm doing a rush job (as always!) to prepare wind parts
> from
> a composer's printed "manuscript", which is in concert pitch throughout
> (and
> so reduced in size that I need a magnifying glass).  The band due to play
> it
> has only one horn at present and I'm having to cue the other three horns
> onto other instruments where necessary.
>
> In one place where the horns are not covered, their notes have "+"
> articulation marks above them.   What does this mean and what is the effect
> on the sound?  The notes are close to middle C so I have a wide choice of
> instruments to cue them to.  What would be the most suitable band
> instrument
> to imitate this sound?
>
> Thanks
> Peter
>
>
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