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 blending clarinets
Author: diz 
Date:   2002-05-02 02:24

Hmm, after reading some comments about clarinetists insisting on their 2nds and 3rds playing the same brand of clarinet ... heaven help us that we should have some tonal diversity in music!!

I was conducting last night and listened to my two clarinetists playing some twiddly bits and thought - "wow, what a nice sound, must remember to ask them about their brands".

Well, I had almost assumed they had the same brand, as their tone was almost identical - to my surprise, clarinet 1 was using a Buffet Festival and clarinet 2 was using a Leblanc - horror, shock!! They actually played beautifully together, but why?

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 RE: blending clarinets
Author: GBK 
Date:   2002-05-02 02:30

diz...I think that the reason your 2 clarinetists sounded so well together is that they both observed orchestral rule #1:

"Thou shalt listen to one another" ...GBK

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 RE: blending clarinets
Author: Bob Arney 
Date:   2002-05-02 04:01

diz, could they have been playing Bass Clarinets because "they were down-under"???
Bob A

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 RE: blending clarinets
Author: diz 
Date:   2002-05-02 04:23

ha ha, very funny

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 RE: blending clarinets
Author: Willie 
Date:   2002-05-02 04:50

GBK hit the nail on the head here. My good ol' band director worked us (woodwinds) after school to teach us how to listen and adjust our pitch. We had to. At least half of the 18 clarinets were old metal school horns. But, our woodwinds caught the eye (ear?) of the judges many a time. We won against many of the "richer" schools that had all new wooden horns.

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 RE: blending clarinets
Author: IHL 
Date:   2002-05-02 10:17

haven't the residents of this bb always been saying that the instrument is the least significant part of a clarinettist's sound, and the embouchure is what matters most?

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 RE: blending clarinets
Author: Mark Pinner 
Date:   2002-05-02 12:44

I thought the whole woodwind choir played beatifully together last night. GNS rocks if you can have a bit of fun.

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 RE: blending clarinets
Author: Stéphane 
Date:   2002-05-02 14:46

Diz,

Another explaination could be that you had sipped(!) too much of Shiraz before conducting?  ;)

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 RE: blending clarinets
Author: Don Berger 
Date:   2002-05-02 15:14

In playing a musical now, and church music frequently, I have found that I prefer my Selmer [Bb] to blend better with my lead's Buffet and Selmer, as my LeBlanc requires some emb./fingering tuning, particularly of the throat tones, when finding unisons. A non-scientific observation! Don

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 RE: blending clarinets
Author: Bob 
Date:   2002-05-02 15:44

Aha...what sounds nice to one person...I have pondered much over the subject of why anything sounds "nice" to one and still don't have a complete explanation. Caught some music by Milwaukeean John Downey the other night that I really liked. I think the "listening to each other" is part of it but I also think that the subtle differences in overtones might be part of it..

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 RE: blending clarinets
Author: William 
Date:   2002-05-02 15:44

IHL--Greg Smith puts it this way: the farther away from your mouth you get, the less important the equipement becomes. The concept in your brain is the most important "tool" that we have. Then, the embouchure, the ear, the reed/mouthpiece set-up and then everything else farther away in order. It's like a long trip, the most important information is "where do I want to go?" Then the eyes, the map, the travel mode (car, train, etc) and so on. Have a good trip with, Good Clarineting!!!!!

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 RE: blending clarinets
Author: diz 
Date:   2002-05-02 22:35

I might, also point out, that the bassoon section was particularly effective *thanks to Mr Pinner* - love your bottom B flats!!

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 RE: blending clarinets
Author: Melanie 
Date:   2002-05-05 19:46

My friend and I play in orchestra together as well as do a lot of duets and have done some pit work together. He plays an Leblanc Concerto and I play a Buffet R-13. The other day, during a rehearsal of Mozart's Requiem(we were sight reading), we were given many complements on how well we blend. I think it is completely a matter of listening. After playing together so much in the last 2 years, we have learned to listen and have picked up a lot of similar playing and phrasing characteristics. The same goes with any other group. In my first college jazz band, 3 out of 5 saxes had been in jazz band in high school together. We had no problems blending together even though some of us had switched to different saxes (me-from alto to tenor).

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 RE: blending clarinets
Author: Gregory Smith 
Date:   2002-05-06 19:15

William said:

Greg Smith puts it this way: the farther away from your mouth you get, the less important the equipment becomes.
===============================================================

Thanks for the mention William but I am far from the original source! The famous teacher Stanley Hasty (Professor Emeritus, Eastman School) was where I first heard it.

Gregory Smith

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