The Clarinet BBoard
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Author: Katfish
Date: 2002-05-24 21:23
GBK mentioned in an earlier thread that the Rose Etudes were essential for learning pre 1900s style. What Etude books are esential for learning 20th century style? I am familiar with the books of Perier , Jean-Jean, Zitek, Uhl, Rueff, Jettel, Bitsch, and Seigel. Which good ones am I missing?
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Author: HAT
Date: 2002-05-24 21:53
Christ, how many do you need?
I mean, you can't play etudes for a living.
David Hattner, NYC
www.northbranchrecords.com
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Author: GBK
Date: 2002-05-24 22:41
Katfish...Your list already has more etude books than one could need in a lifetime, however if you want a few others to torture yourself with, you could add the Polatschek "Advanced Studies for the Clarinet" and the Opperman "Modern Daily Studies for the Clarinet."
Your music stand thus runneth over...GBK
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Author: Katfish
Date: 2002-05-24 23:30
I'm newly retired and practice etudes for fun. Do I need to get a life? I've played the Polatschek, I guess I'll try the Opperman.
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Author: susannah
Date: 2002-05-24 23:47
for FUN???
why don't you play some other repetiore that would be fun!
Still, each to his own
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Author: Micaela
Date: 2002-05-26 18:12
They aren't post 1900 but the Kreutzer 42 Etudes for Violin are a workout for clarinets as well- particularly the trill etudes (though the double stop etudes are a bit pointless).
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Author: david dow
Date: 2002-05-30 10:41
Try the Berio Sequenza and how about Stravinsky three pieces which have alot of bite and may more the technique along!
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