Klarinet Archive - Posting 000306.txt from 2002/12

From: "Forest E. Aten Jr." <forestaten@-----.com>
Subj: Re: [kl] bass clarinet in A
Date: Thu, 12 Dec 2002 14:17:35 -0500

Lelia,

Define: "extremely unusual key signatures"

Lot's of things cause "wrong notes". Things like fatigue, bad lighting, need
of new glasses.....ahhhh.....not practicing scales/arpeggios
routinely/properly.

You mention "test" or "competition"....what do you think these kinds of
obligations are trying to prepare the aspiring young performer to be ready
for? Perhaps these "tests", things like scale juries (that are required of
all college/university students) are (hopefully) encouraging music students
to practice all of the scales on a regular schedule so that they can read
music in your "extremely unusual key signatures".

I am a professional pit musician and I play in what you call "extremely
unusual key signatures" all of the time. So...they are not unusual
<"normal"> for me. Perspective is so important. The pit is not the only
place we see these "unusual key signs". As a free lance musician I see quite
a lot of church music these days, modulating from, to and through every key
in the circle. This is not unusual...it is common and something
professionals deal with everyday. Just because we play in keys with many #'s
or b's does not mean that notes will be played "wrong". Keep the faith. My
metronome is ticking now...and I'm working on Cb major. <and looking at the
notes as they pass on the page> hahahaha

Regards,

Forest Aten

----- Original Message -----
From: <LeliaLoban@-----.com>
Subject: [kl] bass clarinet in A

> Roger Shilcock wrote,
> >>>When a group I play with was asked to play for "La Boheme,"
> >>>we eventually did without the bass clarinet - I remember the
> >>>part as being one of those I referred to, though, with anything
> >>>up to seven flats in the key signature.
>
> I wrote,
> >> Thank you for confirming my suspicion that, confronted with something
> >> ridiculous, professional musicians are as likely as anybody else to
say,
> "To
> >> hell with this!"
>
> Daniel Leeson wrote,
> >Lelia, what is it that you find "ridiculous" here?
>
> For one thing, I think it's ridiculous to ask pit musicians to read music
on
> the fly in the key of C-flat major or A-flat minor. It's all very well to
> say that musicians *should* be able to read any key. That's fine if
there's
> plenty of rehearsal time -- but the practical reality is that professional
> pit orchestras rarely get ample rehearsals, and extremely unusual key
> signatures mean wrong notes.
>
> I'm not surprised that Roger Shilcock's group left out or substituted for
the
> B-flat bass clarinet confronted with a part like that (probably on short
> notice, too). Even with enough advance warning to take the part home, I
> don't think it would be worth the trouble to re-spell the score into B
major
> or G-sharp minor, because IMHO it's as easy to remember to flat
*everything*
> while sight-transposing as it is to read in B. And then there's the whole
> other issue of trying to play a clarinet *in tune* in a remote key
signature.
> Whether it's 7 flats or 5 sharps, that's expecting a lot from the
instrument
> as well as the musician. It's a good test for a competition or an exam,
but
> I think it's ridiculous to expect that much in a pit orchestra, since pit
> orchestras are chronically under-rehearsed and the composer never can tell
> what the quality of the changing personnel might be from year to year.
And
> of course Roger Shilcock said he saw *up to* seven flats. If it's G-flat
> with 6 flats, it's not a big help to re-spell the score into F-sharp with
6
> sharps, and it's probably going to sound sour either way.
>
> I did have one uncle, Bill Van Ess, an organist, who not only could read
any
> key up to speed with the greatest of ease, but could sight-transpose from
> anything to anything with equal aplomb. He would sight-read something in
the
> original key with his left hand, while transposing into another key with
his
> right hand and into a third key with his feet, as a parlor trick. (He
> delighted in choosing keys that were, for instance, a minor second down
and a
> minor seventh down from the original.) Other relatives used to hand him
> "black note panic" scores, the most complex they could find, to try to
trip
> him. We would divvy up who monitored each foot and hand, to try to catch
him
> in a mistake. He won a fair amount of pocket change that way. But of
course
> he didn't have to hold the keyboards on pitch as he played on them.
>
> If we're talking about wind players with normal abilities, which is
better,
> the sound of many notes falling on the floor, or a part missing? If the
> first violin part is awkwardly written, then tough luck. The violinist is
> stuck with it and so is the audience. However, the bass clarinet part
often
> is covered, doubled somewhere. I think composers (or their elves who do
the
> part-copying) should be reasonable, that's all.
>
> I love the sound of the bass clarinet, and I can understand that a
composer
> might hear that sound in his/her head and *want* it, but, quoth Mick
Jagger
> or whoever wrote that lyric for him, you can't always get what you want.
Is
> bass clarinet *really* the only instrument that will serve the composer's
> need in the key of A? Couldn't the cellos play that part? Couldn't a
horn
> in F play it, in the key of E? Okay, maybe not... ;-) But I would rather
> not hear a bass clarinet struggle with intonation in the key of B; and
> notating an extracted part in C-flat carries transpositional purity to an
> extreme that really is ridiculous. My 2 cents.
>
> Lelia
>
> ---------------------------------------------------------------------
>

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