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    | Author: Bill Date:   2006-12-17 20:39
 
 My favorite Benny Goodman story (and I may have it wrong, so please correct) is that at the time of his death the Brahms sonatas were found on his music stand.  I have a fairly large collection of music and etudes for clarinet, but my default music, what has always been on my music stand for many years, is Voxman's Classical Studies. That's what I play most.
 
 What's on your music stand year after year?
 
 Bill. (P.S. I might also add that for me Bach is the "default" composer.)
 
 Bill Fogle
 Ellsworth, Maine
 (formerly Washington, DC)
 
 
 Post Edited (2006-12-18 01:00)
 
 
 
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    | Author: GBK Date:   2006-12-17 20:47
 
 Aside from what I am currently working on,  always on the stand is:
 
 Baermann III
 Kroepsch Book 1
 Rose 40 and 32 (Hite edition)
 A very worn xerox copy of Langenus exercises #11 and #12 (from Part 3)
 
 ...GBK
 
 
 
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    | Author: LarryBocaner ★2017 Date:   2006-12-17 20:52
 
 Right now:  Stark 24 Studies; Wiedemann Klarinetten-Studien, Heft 3 (duos I play with my students).
 
 Baermann III and V are laying on the floor close by!
 
 
 
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    | Author: tictactux ★2017 Date:   2006-12-17 21:52
 
 Right now a half-finished Madame Butterfly solo edition. Behind it my cheat sheets and the repertoire book with the things-to-play-even-when-totally-unprepared.
 
 --
 Ben
 
 
 
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    | Author: crnichols Date:   2006-12-17 22:13
 
 Baermann divisions I-III
 Rose 32 and 40, Hite edition
 Mozart Concerto
 
 Christopher Nichols, D.M.A.
 Assistant Professor of Clarinet
 University of Delaware
 
 
 
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    | Author: Iceland clarinet Date:   2006-12-17 22:25
 
 Sonata for clarinet and piano by Pulenc,Peer Gynt-suite 1 by Grieg,Bukolla(Cow) concerto for clarinet and orchestra by the Icelandic composer Thorkell Sigurbjornsson(from 1974),Cirkus music by Elias Davidsson and Une noit sur le mont chauve by M.Moussorgsky
 
 
 
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    | Author: bufclar Date:   2006-12-17 22:27
 
 Mozart Concerto
 Baermann III
 Hadcocks "The Working Clarinetist"
 A couple of file folders of excerpts not found in the Hadcock
 My trusty Dr. Beat and a digital tunner
 
 
 
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    | Author: Mags1957 Date:   2006-12-17 22:41
 
 These two are always on my stand:
 
 Baermann III
 Vade Mecum
 
 These days, I also have:
 
 Finzi Concerto
 Stravinsky Three Pieces
 Three Etudes on Themes of Gershwin
 Rose 32 - the Melvin Warner version - highly recommended.
 
 
 
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    | Author: jmcgann Date:   2006-12-17 22:59
 
 My transcription of Louis Armstrong's 1928 Basin St. Blues solo
 
 www.johnmcgann.com
 
 
 
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    | Author: SVClarinet09 Date:   2006-12-17 23:09
 
 therejmcgann wrote:
 
 > My transcription of Louis Armstrong's 1928 Basin St. Blues solo
 >
 
 john is there a place where I could get this? i heard pete fountains rendition of it and i was absolutely amazed, i cant seem to find it anywhere
 
 
 
 
 
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    | Author: Ralph Katz Date:   2006-12-17 23:17
 
 Very similar, except they all go in my case when I am not using them:
 
 Baermann III (I had a bindery replace the staples with tape and stitching)
 Vade Mecum
 Voxman Classical studies
 Metronome
 Electronic tuner
 
 
 
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    | Author: Tim2 Date:   2006-12-17 23:40
 
 Baermann III
 JeanJean 16 Etudes Modernes
 Erland Von Koch "Monologue III"
 
 
 
 Post Edited (2006-12-18 00:39)
 
 
 
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    | Author: jmcgann Date:   2006-12-18 00:03
 
 
 Quote:
 > My transcription of Louis Armstrong's 1928 Basin St. Blues solo
 >
 
 john is there a place where I could get this?
 
 A few years back, my friend Matt Glaser wrote an article on Louis for the Village Voice- I transcribed two versions of his solos on Basin St. Blues:
 
 option/click or right click:  Louis Armstrong's solos to Basin St. Blues, 1928 and 1933
 
 Parts in Bb, of course. Enjoy!
 
 www.johnmcgann.com
 
 Post Edited (2006-12-18 00:09)
 
 
 
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    | Author: Tom A Date:   2006-12-18 00:30
 
 A receipt for telescope repair
 A bookmark in the shape of a treble clef.
 3 non-writing pens.
 
 Not cool.
 
 
 
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    | Author: Caco185 Date:   2006-12-18 03:47
 
 -JeanJean 16 Etudes Moderne
 -The Working Clarinettist by Hadcock
 -Baermann III
 -Peregi Verbunk by Weiner
 -Osborne Rhapsody
 
 Dale Huggard
 Clarinet Performance Major, Michigan
 Buffet R-13 - Silver plated
 Genussa Excellente
 Spriggs Floating Rail Ligature
 Vandoren V12 #4
 
 
 
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    | Author: clarnibass Date:   2006-12-18 03:56
 
 Right now, the music from the CD called Double Trio - Green Dolphy Suite. Some of it I received from the composers, some of it I transcribed.
 
 
 
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    | Author: hinotehud ★2017 Date:   2006-12-18 13:16
 
 Langenus Complete Method Part 3
 Klose's Celebrated Method
 Horovitz Sonatina
 Bassi's Concert Paraphrase on Rigoletto
 Patterson's Conversations
 Rose 32 and 40 Studies are always close by
 
 
 
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    | Author: Brenda Siewert Date:   2006-12-18 13:34
 
 Artistic Studies Book 1 edited by David Hite, containing:
 Rose 40 Studies, Bks. 1 & 2, Rose 32 Etudes, and Rose-9 Caprices.
 Christmas concert music.
 
 
 
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    | Author: ZCClarinet Date:   2006-12-18 14:41
 
 JeanJean's Vade Mecum
 Baermann III
 Kroepsch daily studies (cycling through all 4 books, currently in book 2)
 Rose (cycling through 40 and 32, currently in 32)
 
 Each is used every morning, so they might as well stay on that stand.
 
 And currently I'm fumbling through the Copland concerto for my own personal enjoyment.
 
 
 
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    | Author: bill28099 Date:   2006-12-18 16:16
 
 Kroepsch I & II or Polatschek Advanced, depends on my mood that week
 Baermann III
 Rose 32,  for bass practice at the moment
 Klose pg 16 & 17, my bass warm up
 Mozart K581
 
 A great teacher gives you answers to questions
 you don't even know you should ask.
 
 
 
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    | Author: lowclarinetman Date:   2006-12-18 16:42
 
 Baermann III
 Copland Concerto (playing next year)
 Neilson Concerto (finally making myself learn it)
 Sparkle -  Takayuki Rai (bass clarinet)
 King Friday - Michael Lowenstern (bass clarinet)
 Assorted excerpts for Cincinnati Audition
 
 Real Books vol 1 and 2 practicing standards on tenor sax
 
 
 
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    | Author: EuGeneSee Date:   2006-12-18 19:14
 
 . . . and representing the beginner-retread side of the house:
 
 Tuner
 Metronome
 Beginner books
 A few 3rd clarinet parts from our community band library
 
 Eu
 
 
 
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    | Author: marcia Date:   2006-12-19 03:19
 
 Soon there will be a brightly coloured bow on it, before it takes its place beside the Christmas tree.
 
 Marcia
 
 
 
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    | Author: Detru Cofidin Date:   2006-12-19 03:32
 
 Baermann III
 Osborne Rhapsody
 Rubank Selected Studies
 An exercise my instructor gave me for practicing intervals
 
 metronome
 no pencil
 
 Nicholas Arend
 
 
 
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    | Author: Alseg Date:   2006-12-19 04:22
 
 Rose 32
 Galper scales
 Weber 7 Variations, with the Piano part on my wife's piano
 Stubbins flexibility excercise
 Excerpt from Strauss Gypsy Baron (see recent threat and download here)
 and--------
 A pamphlet on how to refinish hardwood floors
 Metronome,  pencil and a Milk Bone dog biscuit.
 
 
 Former creator of CUSTOM  CLARINET TUNING BARRELS   by DR. ALLAN SEGAL
 -Where the Sound Matters Most(tm)-
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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    | Author: clarinets1 Date:   2006-12-19 16:10
 
 as of this very minute, a pencil, and a small stuffed bald eagle puppet, but when i am practicing, my current collection is:
 Galper "tone, technique, and staccato"
 Persichetti "Parable for clarinet"
 Rossini "Theme and variations"
 Widor "Introduction and rondo"
 Weber "Concerto no. 2".
 
 
 
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    | Author: Escsrc Date:   2006-12-19 16:43
 
 Always:
 standard pencil
 red pencil
 mini-metronome
 Baermann III
 Rose 40 (part 2)
 Brahms 120-1
 manuscript paper + pen
 
 Currently:
 Weber, Grand Duo Concertante (2 clarinets version by Langenus)
 Mozart K622
 some corking (need to re-"buffer" the G# key, and keep forgetting to get around to it)
 a scale exercise scanned/printed from Klose
 
 
 
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    | Author: BelgianClarinet Date:   2006-12-19 17:21
 
 Actually my music stand is 'folded', because for an extra-ordinary rehearsal outside our normal place we had to bring our own ... :-)
 
 There should be :
 
 some stuff for my Bass Class (Kibbe, Swerts,...)
 some stuff for the local wind band ( Armenian Dances - reed, Yiddish dances, Sword dance from Hymn of the Highlands - Spark,...)
 Beethoven's fifth - for symphony (mainly to learn to transpose C clarinet)
 
 
 
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    | Author: johng ★2017 Date:   2006-12-19 18:15
 
 This is always interesting! Kind of like a come-as-you-are party.
 
 On mine: I had just cleaned out my private teaching backpack -
 
 Percy Granger - Album for clarinet and piano
 Bumke - Saxophone Studies Vol 2
 First Repertoire Pieces for Clarinet
 Master Solos Intermediate Level for clarinet
 Mike Curtis Ten Klezmer Duos
 John Gibson Selections from Bach's Christmas Oratorio Duet
 
 Then my stuff -
 
 an arrangement of El Shaddai for alto sax to play in church in January
 Langenus transcription of Bach's Chromatic Fantasy for clarinet
 Saint-Saens Introduction and Rondo Caprissioso for Violin (thinking of doing a transcription for clarinet)
 Barenreiter version of Mozart clarinet concerto
 Mozart concerto full score
 a tuning chart for my Bb and A clarinets
 my transcription of an aria from Bach's Christmas Oratorio for clarinet and piano (to play for Christmas day)
 Fred's dominant 7th exercise - a great exercise one of my friends made up
 Motive and Five Variations for Solo Clarinet by Matt Doran
 The Nightmare solo transcription
 A package containing music for an orchestra concert in January: Nielsen Sym #1, Sibelius Finlandia, and Grieg Piano Concerto
 a pen from my former employer (it's OK, they were throwing these out)
 and two Stand-Outs
 
 I need to put stuff away again, I think.
 
 johng
 
 John Gibson, Founder of JB Linear Music, www.music4woodwinds.com
 
 
 
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    | Author: Bassie Date:   2006-12-28 11:42
 
 Except when I'm stamping on it, this has haunted my music stand for many years... a piece I played for ABRSM grade 5, by Crusell, entitled 'Menuetto from Quartet in C minor, Op. 4', arranged for clarinet/piano. It's on a dogeared page from a book, with a big '2' at the top of the page and a thing by Rimsky-Korsakov on the back. Anyone know it?
 
 Playing it: fine. Playing it right, to my own satisfaction: think Sisyphus and that rock he had to push up hill for all eternity. Drives me crazy.
 
 
 
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    | Author: JJAlbrecht Date:   2006-12-28 19:11
 
 Hite Artistic stiudies
 Klose
 pencil and tuner/metronome
 concert band folder of ordinary to slightly challenging music
 K622, which I hope I will be able to play someday, giving it a rentdition it truly deserves, before I drop dead.
 ![[happy]](http://test.woodwind.org/clarinet/BBoard/smileys/smiley12.gif) 
 Jeff
 
 
 
 Post Edited (2006-12-28 19:13)
 
 
 
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    | Author: KellyA Date:   2006-12-28 20:09
 
 First Suite in Eb by Holst (fun to play the "march" as a warm-up!)
 Clarinet Polka (even though I have it memorized!)
 Rose Etudes (great to play with the accompaniment CD)
 Fifth Suite for Band (working on the runs in Hora)
 Solo Clarinet part for Jig by Holst (St. Paul's Suite...fun stuff)
 
 
 
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    | Author: Cuisleannach Date:   2006-12-29 02:46
 
 As of this minute.....
 
 Baerman III
 Uhl 1 and 2
 Jeanjean 16, sans cover
 Charlton Method for Recorder
 sheet 400 grit sandpaper
 Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring, transcribed for guitar
 tuner/metronome combo
 2 very sharp Mirado Black Warrior pencils
 reed knife
 
 -Randy
 
 
 
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    | Author: leonardA Date:   2006-12-29 12:46
 
 Baermann I and II,  Galper Clarinet Method Vol. 1
 Play Klezmer
 Dixieland Jam
 
 Leonard
 
 
 
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    | Author: ElisaUK Date:   2006-12-30 08:42
 
 Included on my music stand is my digital kitchen timer clock which is permanently set for ten minutes.  It serves two useful purposes:-  1)Each  time it gets to zero and the alarm goes, I put down my clarinet for a few moments and have a jolly good stretch of my arms, my wrists, my hands and my fingers, in order to combat stiffness and the threat of RSI, and 2) It conveniently divides my practice time into ten minute slots, eg ten minutes for warm up and tone production, ten minutes for chromatic scale, ten minutes for a new scale, etc.  Also on my music stand is a large handwritten reminder to myself which says: "Never practise faster than perfect!"
 
 Elisabeth
 
 
 
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    | Author: Wannes Date:   2006-12-30 11:44
 
 At this very moment:
 
 Saint-Saëns Sonata
 Poulenc Sonata #1
 Bartók Contrasts #3
 
 
 
 Post Edited (2006-12-30 17:40)
 
 
 
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    | Author: Danny Boy Date:   2006-12-30 20:07
 
 Bassie said...
 
 Except when I'm stamping on it, this has haunted my music stand for many years... a piece I played for ABRSM grade 5, by Crusell, entitled 'Menuetto from Quartet in C minor, Op. 4', arranged for clarinet/piano. It's on a dogeared page from a book, with a big '2' at the top of the page and a thing by Rimsky-Korsakov on the back. Anyone know it?
 
 Playing it: fine. Playing it right, to my own satisfaction: think Sisyphus and that rock he had to push up hill for all eternity. Drives me crazy.
 
 ***
 
 I remember that from many moons ago. It's in 'Clarinet Solos with Piano Accompaniment, Volume 2' edited by Dame Thea King and published by Chester. I remember the triplets at the end gave me nightmares!!
 
 (The Rimsky-Korsakov on the other side is bad enough in it's original version...don't touch the version with piano)
 
 Right now on my music stand...
 
 The Nielsen Concerto
 Schumann Fantasiestucke
 Goddaer Clarinet Unlimited
 Debussy Premiere Rhapsodie
 
 A metronome, tuner and pencil
 
 Who needs studies when you have arpeggios?
 
 
 
 
 
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    | Author: Bassie Date:   2006-12-31 10:35
 
 > I remember the triplets at the end gave me nightmares!!
 
 That's just it... if you play the menuetto at the tempo of a decent menuetto, then those triplets go at one heck of a lick. And they're (mostly) tongued. And they ain't simple arpeggios...
 
 I find it's the perfect testbed for new mouthpiece/reed combinations. Really exercizes the instrument/player combination. :-)
 
 
 
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    | Author: kilo Date:   2007-01-01 12:33
 
 Langenus II & III
 Lazarus II
 Bach for Clarinet (Caravan)
 Charlie Parker Omnibook in Bb
 Yusef Lateef's Repository of Scales and Melodic Patterns
 
 
 
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    | Author: Bill Date:   2007-01-01 14:36
 
 I've been playing from the Alfred Uhl second book lately. Musically I like the stuff in it much better than the first book ... really enjoyable (and difficult). It sort of makes me chuckle that some of the exercises were designed to focus on problem areas of a clarinet with a different key system, and one flies through them easily on the Boehm. Ah-HA!
  
 Bill.
 
 Bill Fogle
 Ellsworth, Maine
 (formerly Washington, DC)
 
 
 
 
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    | Author: GoatTnder Date:   2007-01-01 20:00
 
 Currently, I have the Rossini Introduction, Theme, and Variations and The Brahm's sonatas.
 
 Andres Cabrera
 South Bay Wind Ensemble
 www.SouthBayWinds.com
 sbwe@sbmusic.org
 
 Post Edited (2007-01-01 20:00)
 
 
 
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    | Author: ElisaUK Date:   2007-01-27 17:49
 
 I have just added an extra item to the objects on my music stand - a left over and unwanted 6" x 6" mirror tile which I found lurking in my bathroom cupboard!
 
 So many clarinet tutor books suggest that for beginners (of which I am one) it is a good idea sometimes to look at yourself playing in a mirror.  I have never managed this because I don't much fancy looking at myself playing the clarinet in the bathroom.  However, I have now sellotaped a small rolled up wadge of newspaper to the top of the back of the tile so that when it is on my music stand it is angled so that I can clearly see both my hands on the clarinet (and thankfully not my face!).
 
 I am already feeling the benefit of using the mirror when I am doing slow warm up tone exercises.  As it is normally impossible to see what one's fingers are doing, it is now possible to see exactly where they are and which keys they are on for which note.  Quite a revelation to me!
 
 Elisabeth
 
 
 
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    | Author: bob49t Date:   2007-01-27 18:50
 
 I condone the mirror idea....ideal to see how far we lift our fingers when it's not necessary.
 
 Well, ........ hankie .... suspended ergonomically for easy reach......sorry, I didn't tell you the real reason for this.......staring at me are photocopies (for my personal use only) of the last few pages of Ponchielli's "Dance of the Hours"......you know.....THE GRACE NOTE SECTION...........I hope I'm not alone thinking it's a b***** at the correct speed ?.....
 
 BobT........(searching for the tippex with which to erase, not sniff.....hello there's a thought !)
 
 
 
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