Klarinet Archive - Posting 000144.txt from 2005/10
From: "dnleeson" <dnleeson@-----.net> Subj: RE: [kl] Pruefer Clarinet Date: Fri, 14 Oct 2005 17:54:40 -0400
I think I based my answer on the pitch of the note you said you
had to play on the clarinet, when you played a B-flat on the
piano.
When a B-flat is played on the piano and you play a C and the two
notes sound the same, you are in tune.
When a B-flat is played on the piano and you play a B-natural and
the two sound the same, that is a low pitch clarinet.
When a B-flat is played on the piano and you play a C-sharp and
the two sound the same, that is a high pitch clarinet.
(Somebody corroborate this incase I am thinking upside down).
Dan Leeson
DNLeeson@-----.net
-----Original Message-----
From: Tim Roberts [mailto:timr@-----.com]
Sent: Friday, October 14, 2005 2:29 PM
To: klarinet@-----.org
Subject: RE: [kl] Pruefer Clarinet
On Fri, 14 Oct 2005 05:44:34 -0700, "dnleeson"
<dnleeson@-----.net>
>In my opinion, the instrument you describe is a low pitch B-flat
>clarinet. In the 1920s, when one was called for a gig, the
first
>question that was asked by the player was about pitch. He or
she
>had to know which instrument to bring, and a request that player
>bring an LP clarinet was commonplace.
>
You meant to say "high pitch", yes? An old, high pitch B-flat
clarinet
would be able to simulate something close to a B-natural clarinet
at
A440. It would still be about 25 cents flat.
--
Tim Roberts, timr@-----.com
Providenza & Boekelheide, Inc.
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