On 19.11.2009 Andrew Stiller wrote:
On the rare occasions where I've seen this specified (in Mahler, for example), the German
expression has been viel Bogen. Were I to want this effect, I would use the English
equivalent much bow.
For me as a violinist Fast Bow and Viel Bogen is not exactly
On 19.11.2009 Andrew Stiller wrote:
On the rare occasions where I've seen this specified (in
Mahler, for example), the German expression has been viel
Bogen. Were I to want this effect, I would use the English
equivalent much bow.
For me as a violinist Fast Bow and Viel Bogen is not
At 3:52 PM -0500 11/19/09, Andrew Stiller wrote:
Someone else mentioned flautando, but this is not at all
equivalent. Flautando specifically means to play with the edge of
the bow-hair (at any speed), and is a light, airy effect.
Thank you for that, Andrew. We played Joseph/Dreamcoat last
Hello!
I'm looking for any kind of standard notation symbol for playing
string instruments with a fast bow speed. Does anyone know if any such
symbol exists?
Best regards,
Jari Williamsson
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I don't think so. My teacher used to write Fast Bow or Slow Bow
where it mattered. It's much worse in German, schneller Bogen or
langsamer Bogen seems to take far too much space, so I still use the
English terms...
Johannes
On 19.11.2009 Jari Williamsson wrote:
Hello!
I'm looking for any
Jari Williamsson wrote:
Hello!
I'm looking for any kind of standard notation symbol for playing
string instruments with a fast bow speed. Does anyone know if any such
symbol exists?
See Gardner Read, Music Notation, 2nd. Ed., Boston 1969, page 406,
example 23-24 (section 'String notation,
Christian Mondrup wrote:
See Gardner Read, Music Notation, 2nd. Ed., Boston 1969, page 406,
example 23-24 (section 'String notation, modern innovations). I'm not a
Finale user and hence don't know whether the symbol has been implemented
in Finale.
You mean the 23-44? That's for fast
Johannes Gebauer wrote:
I don't think so. My teacher used to write Fast Bow or Slow Bow
where it mattered. It's much worse in German, schneller Bogen or
langsamer Bogen seems to take far too much space, so I still use the
English terms...
Ok, f.b. would be an alternative when it's generally
Jari Williamsson wrote:
Christian Mondrup wrote:
See Gardner Read, Music Notation, 2nd. Ed., Boston 1969, page 406,
example 23-24 (section 'String notation, modern innovations). I'm not
a Finale user and hence don't know whether the symbol has been
implemented in Finale.
You mean the 23-44?
At 2:10 PM +0100 11/19/09, Jari Williamsson wrote:
Hello!
I'm looking for any kind of standard notation symbol for playing
string instruments with a fast bow speed. Does anyone know if any
such symbol exists?
No. At least not in standard notation that any trained player would recognize.
John Howell wrote:
At 2:10 PM +0100 11/19/09, Jari Williamsson wrote:
Hello!
I'm looking for any kind of standard notation symbol for playing
string instruments with a fast bow speed. Does anyone know if any such
symbol exists?
No. At least not in standard notation that any trained player
I suppose that is what flautando means in essence, ie fast (and light)
bowing.
If a symbol were to be used, I imagine that the stem with an arrow
through it would be the best. This is in one of the opus fonts.
Matthew
Sent from my iPhone
On 20/11/2009, at 12:10 AM, Jari Williamsson
On Nov 19, 2009, at 8:55 AM, Johannes Gebauer wrote:
I don't think so. My teacher used to write Fast Bow or Slow Bow
where it mattered. It's much worse in German, schneller Bogen or
langsamer Bogen seems to take far too much space, so I still use the
English terms...
On the rare occasions
On Thu, 2009-11-19 at 15:52 -0500, Andrew Stiller wrote:
On Nov 19, 2009, at 8:55 AM, Johannes Gebauer wrote:
I don't think so. My teacher used to write Fast Bow or Slow Bow
where it mattered. It's much worse in German, schneller Bogen or
langsamer Bogen seems to take far too much
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