The Clarinet BBoard
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Author: Paul Aviles
Date: 2022-10-24 05:07
I'd do it the same way you do the G to C at the end of the Artie Shaw. The first note is really an upper partial. So finger an Eb on the fourth space of the staff, but play the F sitting on top the third ledger over the staff. To get the gliss started I'd just raise the third finger of the right hand to get the high F#. From there it is a normal gliss up to the Bb.......that I finger ALL OPEN except for the second finger of the left hand (NO REGISTER KEY, NO THUMB!!!). Sometimes I add a RH sliver key vent but only if you need the extra boost.
...........Paul Aviles
Post Edited (2022-10-24 18:02)
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Author: cigleris
Date: 2022-10-24 22:45
I play this regularly and you can find a version I did with band on my YouTube channel. I personally don’t do a Rhapsody in Blue style gliss for that particular moment. I do more a true chromatic. I would say do what works best for you
Peter Cigleris
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Author: SecondTry
Date: 2022-10-25 00:18
cigleris wrote:
> I play this regularly and you can find a version I did with
> band on my YouTube channel. I personally don’t do a Rhapsody
> in Blue style gliss for that particular moment. I do more a
> true chromatic. I would say do what works best for you
>
I'd love to know your fingerings from F6 to Bb6 Peter.
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Author: Tom H
Date: 2022-10-25 01:30
I tried it and found that it seems best to start with the "covered" F. Seems there is more than one way but regardless you end up on the Bb with either just 2nd & 3rd LH fingers (no thumb) or just the 2nd (middle) finger. Probably varies a bit with different clarinets.
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Post Edited (2022-10-25 04:52)
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Author: SecondTry
Date: 2022-10-26 05:41
Tom H wrote:
> I tried it and found that it seems best to start with the
> "covered" F. Seems there is more than one way but regardless
> you end up on the Bb with either just 2nd & 3rd LH fingers (no
> thumb) or just the 2nd (middle) finger. Probably varies a bit
> with different clarinets.
>
>
> Post Edited (2022-10-25 04:52)
Tom: not sure what a covered F6 is from a fingering standpont. Maybe you can give us your fingerings, F6 through Bb6.
Cheers.
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Author: Tom Piercy
Date: 2022-10-27 14:26
Second Try: The audio sample/excerpt you linked to in the original post is not a "gliss" in the style of Gershwin's Rhapsody. He is fingering the notes from F to Bb.
Are you looking for fingerings to go from the F to Bb as heard in the excerpt or are you trying to figure out how to do a Gershwin Rhapsody style gliss?
Tom Piercy
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Author: SecondTry
Date: 2022-10-27 23:22
Tom Piercy wrote:
> Second Try: The audio sample/excerpt you linked to in the
> original post is not a "gliss" in the style of Gershwin's
> Rhapsody. He is fingering the notes from F to Bb.
>
> Are you looking for fingerings to go from the F to Bb as heard
> in the excerpt or are you trying to figure out how to do a
> Gershwin Rhapsody style gliss?
>
Hi Tom:
I seek to perform those steps, which are easiest and most reliable, to glissando from the F6 to the Bb6.
That those steps may involve fingering only, or in combination with embouchure, or pulling away fingers as is normally done to effect the glissando in the beginning of Rhapsody in Blue is something I don't make demands on.
If someone had a reliable way to do this that involved switching hands I'd entertain that.
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