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Author: Bobo
Date: 2008-01-07 17:56
I would love to hear from an American conservatory trained oboist whether the Gillet Etudes are being used in the US. I've got to believe they are. All of the various French series of etudes are historical in nature, each one building on the previous ones to capture advances in musical demands. According to an IDRS article by Laila Storch (quote below), this was true of Gillet as well, who composed his etudes because he felt that the demands of the then new music were stretching the technical skills inherent in the traditional etudes of Brod, Barret, etc. Anyway, Ferling played to the marked tempos is pretty darned fast, I'd say. I'd recommend the Silvestrini Etudes for the truly ambitious!! As for tongueing speed, maybe they're faster in Europe or not - I've heard some people speculate it's related to the heavier use of the tongue in many continental languages! Also, the competitions you're referring to are not strictly oboe competitions are they? So it's once in a blue moon someone like an Alex Klein comes along and actually wins one of those things for the oboe crowd, regardless of nationality? I'd say the Fox-Gillet is a better measure of things. But on your point that music is not a rigid thing, I certainly agree.
Quote:
When Gillet composed the Studies in the early part of this century, it was to help his students to be prepared to meet the difficulties being encountered in the new music of the time. Many of the compositions of Debussy, Ravel and Dukas with their increased use of the upper register of the oboe, contain passages which present a challenge to this day. As Gillet says in his dedication:
"The studies given heretofore in my class are old in form although they possess real value, but they no longer meet the requirements of the perfecting work that the continuous progress of modern music calls for."
If during the first part of this century many oboists entered the professional field without a thorough preparation of the Gillet Studies, now eighty years after their appearance, we have long since reached a point where they must be considered an integral part of every student's program of study.
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ohsuzan |
2008-01-04 15:40 |
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cjwright |
2008-01-04 16:43 |
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hautbois |
2008-01-04 16:50 |
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d-oboe |
2008-01-04 18:01 |
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JudyP |
2008-01-04 18:13 |
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mschmidt |
2008-01-04 18:16 |
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JRJINSA |
2008-01-04 18:33 |
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cjwright |
2008-01-04 18:46 |
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Dutchy |
2008-01-04 19:26 |
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Bobo |
2008-01-04 21:27 |
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kdrew922 |
2008-01-04 21:46 |
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mschmidt |
2008-01-05 00:20 |
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mschmidt |
2008-01-05 18:18 |
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Bobo |
2008-01-04 22:29 |
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cjwright |
2008-01-04 23:41 |
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HautboisJJ |
2008-01-05 02:26 |
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sylvangale |
2008-01-05 05:18 |
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Dutchy |
2008-01-05 16:04 |
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kdrew922 |
2008-01-05 17:12 |
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JudyP |
2008-01-05 19:40 |
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ohsuzan |
2008-01-05 17:04 |
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vboboe |
2008-01-05 18:43 |
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johnt |
2008-01-05 20:14 |
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Dutchy |
2008-01-05 20:34 |
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sylvangale |
2008-01-05 22:49 |
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doublereeder2 |
2008-01-06 03:58 |
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Dutchy |
2008-01-06 16:12 |
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chrisoboe |
2008-01-07 02:06 |
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cjwright |
2008-01-07 02:09 |
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chrisoboe |
2008-01-07 02:14 |
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oboeblank |
2008-01-07 03:16 |
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chrisoboe |
2008-01-07 04:16 |
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kdrew922 |
2008-01-07 08:37 |
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kdrew922 |
2008-01-07 08:30 |
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JudyP |
2008-01-07 04:35 |
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chrisoboe |
2008-01-07 04:43 |
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jhoyla |
2008-01-07 10:01 |
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chrisoboe |
2008-01-07 14:57 |
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Bobo |
2008-01-07 15:13 |
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chrisoboe |
2008-01-07 15:55 |
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jhoyla |
2008-01-07 15:34 |
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A.U.K |
2008-01-07 15:42 |
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chrisoboe |
2008-01-07 16:00 |
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kdrew922 |
2008-01-07 16:06 |
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Re: Is Barret Obsolete? new |
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Bobo |
2008-01-07 17:56 |
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chrisoboe |
2008-01-07 20:14 |
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Dutchy |
2008-01-08 04:22 |
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hautbois |
2008-01-08 16:01 |
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Bobo |
2008-01-08 15:18 |
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Dutchy |
2008-01-08 17:52 |
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chrisoboe |
2008-01-08 23:10 |
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HautboisJJ |
2008-01-10 13:09 |
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chrisoboe |
2008-01-10 22:51 |
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Bobo |
2008-01-09 16:28 |
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Dutchy |
2008-01-10 18:42 |