But, Jeremy, that´s the situation. There is no insult. I
have to do with young musicians a lot. And they do copying
and copying from copies which are copies from copies eztc.
You go after the American Law which is binding you, we go
after the European Law which is binding us. Punctum ! Wagner
is n
aunching off into a lengthy monologue about the ills of
modern society.
I've said my piece.
Cheers -
Jeremy
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of hans
Sent: Thursday, September 13, 2007 10:29 AM
To: 'The Horn List'
Subject: R
Thursday, September 13, 2007 2:39 PM
To: 'The Horn List'
Subject: RE: [Hornlist] Mahler 9
There's a couple things wrong with the below statements.
"But the printed music is not public domain as long as the
publishing company exists"
This is simply not the case. It
uld be a LOT fewer recordings on the market and the recording of
the long call on your website would be subject to fines and perhaps even
jail time. (Breitkopf, right?)
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of hans
Sent: Thursday, September 13, 2007 1
ing
them out.
===
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Jay Anderson
Sent: Thursday, September 13, 2007 6:02 AM
To: The Horn List
Subject: Re: [Hornlist] Mahler 9
I hesitate to respond, but here goes.
There is no world wide
I hesitate to respond, but here goes.
There is no world wide problem and us younger generation people don't
want everything for free (and we all don't waste our money on fancy
clothes and parties like you imply). However I do value
accessibility. Most classical music pieces that people play are i
The full score is available inexpensively from Dover. For something
like this there is good reason to own, read, and practice from the
full score. While page turns may occasionally be bothersome, you will
understand how parts double and what else is happening when you play.
http://www.amazon.com
There is a world wide problem now:
you want everything for FREE, which is not good. If one is
ready to play Mahler 9, one can invest & should invest
something to build up ones own library, not from copies, but
from real things. That´s we did & we had less access & less
funds. But we did it. We s
I know imslp.org doesn't have Mahler 9 yet, but it is a long term goal
to eventually add scans of public domain parts. If any of you have
access to any parts they would be a great addition. I believe the only
orchestral parts currently on IMSLP are for Rachmaninov's Symphony
No.2. For now your best
You mean for free? Probably not, but you can buy vol 2 of the
Orchestral Musician's CD-Rom Library
(http://www.orchmusiclibrary.com/) for about $20, and that includes
all the horn parts for all the Mahler symphonies as well as various
other of Mahler's orchestral works. It also includes horn parts
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Can anyone tell me without too much work what the four trills that begin 16
before marker 41 in third movement - which are whole step and which half step?
The first trill (written E) goes to F# (whole step); nest, the D goes to
E (whole step). The grace notes i
Most likely the exposed solo (with woodwinds), measure 381 to 391. I
worked this up for an audition in the early '90s
Dan
On Dec 7, 2006, at 10:07 PM, Mathew James wrote:
Hi all.
I am preparing a mock audition and one exceprt is Mahler 9, a first
honr
one.
I couldnt find it in any excp
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