The Clarinet BBoard
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Author: KristinVanHorn
Date: 2006-08-16 23:24
Hello again all. Well i'm looking for carnival of venice for clarinet but i would like to have a version for beginners. does anyone know where i can get one?
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Author: clarinetwife
Date: 2006-08-17 02:02
How "beginning" do you need? There is an old Belwin solo arranged by Hovey and Leonard. It isn't beginner-beginner -- goes up to altissimo D with 16th note scale and arpeggio passages in 6/8 time. It is a theme and two variations.
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Author: BobD
Date: 2006-08-17 14:38
The Authentic Edition of "Arban's" pub by Carl Fisher has the "Fantaisie and Variations" on "The Carnival of Venice" for Bb Cornet. Just play it slowly until you speed it up. The book is not cheap but is a valuable learning tool for Bb clarinet for other purposes besides what you're looking for.
Bob Draznik
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Author: Ken Shaw ★2017
Date: 2006-08-17 15:29
As GBK has said, the Arban trumpet method is useful for clarinetists, because it has things that are not in any clarinet method. Trumpet players must learn early on to make seamless lip slurs and valve interchanges, so Arban gives many exercises.
Top professional clarinetists do things that even most conservatory performance majors cannot, and one of the main ones is seamless intervals. A standard clarient challenge is etude #1 of the Rose 40, and Daniel Bonade started his students on this first thing. It's well worth your time to get a copy of Arban and work systematically on perfecting the intervals.
Ken Shaw
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Author: KristinVanHorn
Date: 2006-08-17 23:51
How "beginning" do you need? There is an old Belwin solo arranged by Hovey and Leonard. It isn't beginner-beginner -- goes up to altissimo D with 16th note scale and arpeggio passages in 6/8 time. It is a theme and two variations.
i think i have one similar to the one you mention above. the one i have goes as high as C above the staff. i do fair until i get to the 16th notes and i can go no further. i would like a version that is just a little easier.
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Author: BobD
Date: 2006-08-18 13:21
So....just cut the notes "in half".....a sixteenth becomes and eigth
Bob Draznik
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Author: clarinetwife
Date: 2006-08-18 13:56
BobD wrote:
> So....just cut the notes "in half".....a sixteenth becomes and
> eigth
>
precisely, since the eighth note gets the beat. And, my students do play that second variation slower for awhile before they can play the whole piece at tempo. In fact, there is a slower metronome setting marked for that passage in the Hovey-Leonard arrangement.
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Author: KristinVanHorn
Date: 2006-08-18 15:41
So....just cut the notes "in half".....a sixteenth becomes and eigth
Bob Draznik
hey good idea. i can play eight note fairly well.
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Author: BobD
Date: 2006-08-18 15:49
You can also play Flight of The Bumblebee that way...
Bob Draznik
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Author: 2E
Date: 2006-08-19 03:58
Jean Jean wrote a carnival de venice for Bb clarinet, not for beginners though ...
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Author: beejay
Date: 2006-08-23 22:49
There is a nice free version for cornet, bugle or tenorhorn (but it also fits nicely into the clarinet's range) at:
http://www.musicaviva.com/trumpet/list.tpl?inst=trpbbh&phrase=Carnaval+de+Venise&mode=ws
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