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 CoWorker Differences
Author: bcelestial2274 
Date:   2004-08-05 14:17

I play a Selmer Series 9. I work with someone who plays a Buffet R-13. I am having problems relating to this person. How should I treat them as a normal person, when she is obviously very strange?



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 Re: CoWorker Differences
Author: Ken Shaw 2017
Date:   2004-08-05 14:30

Switch to Yamaha. Better yet, switch to bassoon, where everybody is abnormal.

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 Re: CoWorker Differences
Author: Ralph G 
Date:   2004-08-05 14:52

Is she obviously very strange because she plays Buffet?

--Ralph (an obviously very strange Buffet player)

________________

Artistic talent is a gift from God and whoever discovers it in himself has a certain obligation: to know that he cannot waste this talent, but must develop it.

- Pope John Paul II

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 Re: CoWorker Differences
Author: David Spiegelthal 2017
Date:   2004-08-05 15:08

One should NEVER judge a person by his/her clarinet brand! Instead, look at the ligature.....is this a Rovner person? A Vandoren Optimum individual? Or (gasp!) a Francois Louie dude/dudette? The ligature will give you all the deep insight you need into the character of the player..............

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 Re: CoWorker Differences
Author: William 
Date:   2004-08-05 15:16

Perhaps you should consicer switching to a Buffet R13 as well. Then, at the very least, you could both share the same tuning problems.

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 Re: CoWorker Differences
Author: Brenda 
Date:   2004-08-05 15:44

Sounds like our office. Pretty typical with any group of work-mates! Decide that you're going to go more than half-way, but keep the communication open at all times. Go out of your way to give sincere compliments, give her preference in minor matters, overlook small things that admitedly ruffle your feathers, and TALK when serious disagreements haven't worked themselves out. Choose the proper time and place, always consider her dignity, admit when you've been wrong, ask for her suggestions to solve the problem. Give her all the right signals that you want to work WITH her to solve the problem but not that she's the whole problem. You might need to make some adjustments yourself for the sake of good music-making.

Most of the time this smooths things over to ease a long-term working relationship.

Talking about clarinets, I was playing together with my student and realized that the low Bb on her Bundy was painfully sharp. I'll have to check the tone hole to see if it's stuffed with fuzz or something. But what a terrible sound when played together! So yeah, these things can be pretty irritating especially when we think we're right and the other clarinet is off. (A tuner helps, but what do you do when the instrument can't adjust any more?) We have these situations in our Clarinet Choir, but we have to accommodate the individual clarinets without causing serious breaches in our professional relationships.



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 Re: CoWorker Differences
Author: BobD 
Date:   2004-08-05 15:55

See if you can find two other 9s....or is it 3 sixes!

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 Re: CoWorker Differences
Author: ron b 
Date:   2004-08-05 16:03

"Celestial" -

Pull yourself together and you may find, rather than a "them", your co-worker is a real live Individual.


- r[cool]n b -

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 Re: CoWorker Differences
Author: GBK 
Date:   2004-08-05 16:14

The Selmer 9 is a big bore. The Buffet R-13 is a small bore.

It often applies to the players as well....GBK

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 Re: CoWorker Differences
Author: EEBaum 
Date:   2004-08-05 16:50

Normal?

-Alex
www.mostlydifferent.com

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 Re: CoWorker Differences
Author: Mark Charette 
Date:   2004-08-05 16:52

Ken Shaw wrote:

> Switch to Yamaha. Better yet, switch to bassoon, where
> everybody is abnormal.

Or, as my math-major son might say - "better to be abnormal than having to be re-normalized ..."

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 Re: CoWorker Differences
Author: bcelestial2274 
Date:   2004-08-05 17:13

She plays on a BG Revelation. She thinks the Vandoren Optimum is too bright for her taste.



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