The Clarinet BBoard
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Author: Koo Young Chung
Date: 2012-07-25 15:58
I'm looking for 26 Rose etudes published by Carl Fischer.
All I could find was 32 not 26.
Is this available by Carl Fischer?
Thanks
Post Edited (2012-07-25 15:58)
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Author: JHowell
Date: 2012-07-25 16:32
No, I don't think Fischer has it. Available as part of the new Complete Rose edition published by The Complete Works. As an aside, did anyone else here order this book and receive it?
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Author: Ken Shaw ★2017
Date: 2012-07-25 16:42
Fischer has published only two sets, of Rose Etudes, 32 and 40. The sets are completely different. I've never heard of a set of 26.
Rose wrote his etudes for violin. The clarinet etudes are transcriptions with changes to accommodate the different range of the clarinet and avoid extreme keys. For more than anyone could possibly want to know, see the thread at http://test.woodwind.org/clarinet/BBoard/read.html?f=1&i=361723&t=361406
Ken Shaw
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Author: kdk
Date: 2012-07-25 17:01
Ken Shaw wrote:
> Rose wrote his etudes for violin. The clarinet etudes are
> transcriptions with changes to accommodate the different range
> of the clarinet and avoid extreme keys.
They were indeed written for violin, but by composers like Mazas, Kreutzer, Dancla, Schubert and others. Rose edited them for clarinet, in some cases transposing them, removing specifically string-based techniques like double stops and harmonics, deleting notes to provide breaths, sometimes shortening them by deleting repetitious material, etc... It's interesting in some ways to look at the originals (with the help of David and Jean Hite who in their Southern Music edition cite the originals).
There is also a volume edited by Rose and published by International, "20 Grand Studies Selected from the Caprices by Rode" That isn't 26, either. Like the other responders, I've never seen a set of 26 Rose studies.
Karl
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Author: JHowell
Date: 2012-07-25 18:23
Anybody who is interested could look up the-complete-works.com to see the new edition of 118 Rose etudes that includes the 26. I got a sample PDF of the book, and would say that the 26 fit nicely before the 40. More melodic in general than the 40, not as technical as the 32. However, I ordered the book over a month ago and have not received it despite a couple of email exchanges, so take this for what it's worth.
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Author: Paul Aviles
Date: 2012-07-27 18:07
Got mine through <the-complete-works.com>
I appreciate having ALL the Rose one book rather than carting around three sets of music books (or four really). It is spiral bound making it easy on the music stand. And the whole book was only 20 dollars delivered. However, the introductory notes make an issue of this being a "corrected edition." There are notes throughout the etudes that have bothered me harmonically over the years and I choose to self edit. None of these where changed by the way but there are other note/rhythm changes that may bother those of you who have been playing these for awhile.
......................Paul Aviles
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Author: kdk
Date: 2012-07-27 19:48
Is an editor credited? It's nowadays easy enough to go back, mostly via IMSLP, to the original sources of most of the etudes Rose arranged. If this has been corrected by referencing the sources, it should be at best an improvement, even if the editor has still missed some errors (or deliberate changes made by Rose).
Karl
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Author: JHowell
Date: 2012-07-28 05:13
Well, it's nice to see that *somebody* got their copy. Hmph. Back to the email, I guess.
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