The Oboe BBoard
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Author: ohsuzan
Date: 2007-04-05 19:46
Hi Dutchy --
As far as the convention for repeats in the da capo, my understanding (and what my teacher always has me do) is that you do not take the repeats. I don't think oboe conventions are any different than those for other instruments in this regard.
The staccato under a slur is called "portato". So Google asked me, when I went looking for a site to document what I'm saying, "did you mean 'potato'?"
No, I meant "portato", as in you say potato, I say portato. It means to phrase the notes together, playing them longer than staccato but not slurred.
The other marks you mention are a type of accent that I would understand to mean a "forceful staccato". I don't know what they are called, and neither does the Wiki http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accent_%28music%29 The one at the bottom of the note is just the same symbol, flipped so that it attaches to the notehead.
Here's another good, basic site for musical notation symbols: http://www.answers.com/topic/modern-musical-symbols
So many different ways to say the same thing.
S.
Edit: I changed a word -- I meant to say, you play them longer than staccato, but not SLURRED.
Post Edited (2007-04-06 01:47)
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Dutchy |
2007-04-05 15:18 |
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Re: How many repeats do you take on Barret No. 11? new |
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ohsuzan |
2007-04-05 19:46 |
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hautbois |
2007-04-05 20:46 |
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Dutchy |
2007-04-05 23:17 |
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