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Music Trombone

Castérède – Movement 3

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5u1RKRjh0tQ&list=UUEMQAAO-m6bK_8GxuEAdR0w&index=1&feature=plcp

 

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Gifts Music Mutes Trombone

Trombone for the Holidays

Top picks for holiday gifts.

General Accessories: 
Shar 3 in 1 Metronome and Tuner – An excellent clip-on device that can tune by vibration.
Boss BR-80 Micro Br Digital Recorder – Portable multi-track recorder.
Hercules Trombone Stand – A trombone stand that fits in the bell.  A little heavy but extremely convenient.

Trombone Maintenance:
Slide-O-Mix – I prefer the two bottle system but others like the Rapid Comfort system (one bottle).
Hetman Valve Oil – The rotary, linkage and ball joint lubricants are must-haves for valve systems.
Spray bottle – The most easily lost piece of equipment, a trombonist can always use an extra.
Spit valve corks – They seem to fall out at the most inopportune times.  Carrying a few extras never hurts.

Mutes:
Best Brass – On the pricey side but incredible quality.
Jo-Ral – Their brass bottom straight mute is my go-to.

Instruments:
Shires – I’ve been playing on one for almost ten years and wouldn’t consider changing.
Thein – If I had piles of cash lying around I’d buy one of their bass trumpets in a heartbeat and I might as well grab a contrabass bone for giggles while I’m at it.

Publications:
ITA Journals – A wealth of information stretching back to 1971.
Trombone: Its History and Music, 1697-1811 – A not inexpensive volume on the history of the trombone.  In all honesty I’ve never had the opportunity to read it but I’m extremely curious about it.

Categories
Gigs Music Trombone

Riley and Mozart

Two performances last week and both were challenges in endurance.  The first was Terry Riley’s In C with DICE (Dickinson Improvisation and Collaboration Ensemble), a new flexible-instrumentation group at the college, and Third Coast Percussion; the second was Mozart’s Vesperae Solennes de Confessore.

DICE with Third Coast Percussion
DICE with Third Coast Percussion

In C with the two groups was fantastic.  The performance was in the student union building right outside the cafeteria.  We set up on some couches and attracted a decent audience.  Clay from Third Coast played some improvised percussion that I’ll sorely miss in the future.  Our performance was forty minutes long… I had the honor of playing the eighth note pulse the entire time.  It’s an amazing exercise in concentration, especially since percussion is not something I’m accustomed to performing in concert.

Mozart Vesperae Excerpt
Mozart Vesperae Excerpt

It was my first time playing this Mozart.  Actually prior to this week I didn’t know it existed.  And that’s a shame.  It’s a fine piece that obviously contains ideas Mozart would use in his Mass in C Minor and his Requiem.   (Side note: during my first three years in school at Eastman the orchestra director insisted on programming less significant works from the repertoire.  Instead of performing Britten’s War Requiem we played his Sinfonia da Requiem; instead of Brahms’s Ein Deutsches Requiem we played Nänie and Alto Rhapsody; instead of a Stravinsky ballet we played Symphony of Psalms.  It upset a lot of students who wanted to get to know the warhorses better.  In hindsight, I’m happy I got to experience those [fantastic!] lesser known works as it gave me a chance to learn each composer’s style beyond the standard repertoire.)

Knowing about the piece earlier would have also have better prepared me for the high note-athon.  Like the other Mozart choral works the alto trombone doubles the alto voices, only in this case more exactly.  It amounts to thirty minutes of nonstop playing in the upper register.