The Clarinet BBoard
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Author: poopsie
Date: 2006-02-19 00:47
I have been trying to find an arrangement of Rhapsody in Blue recently that is written for solo clarinet with piano accompaniment and have been unable to find a good version out there. I was wondering if someone has a version of this piece that they own or know of someplace I might be able to find it. I have already tried a google search and a search at sheetmusic.com. Any help is appreciated!
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Author: Mark Charette
Date: 2006-02-19 01:03
poopsie wrote:
> I have been trying to find an arrangement of Rhapsody in Blue
> recently that is written for solo clarinet with piano
> accompaniment and have been unable to find a good version out
> there.
You mean Rhapsody in Blue for piano with clarinet accompaniment??
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Author: poopsie
Date: 2006-02-19 01:46
Mark Charette wrote:
> You mean Rhapsody in Blue for piano with clarinet
> accompaniment??
That would certainly be easier to locate, but I had heard that there was a version for solo clarinet out there somewhere.
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Author: EEBaum
Date: 2006-02-19 02:27
I imagine it would be difficult to find, and of questionable quality, likely a custom job. Rhapsody in Blue is primarily a piece for piano with orchestral accompaniment, including a couple cool clarinet licks.
Playing it as clarinet with piano accompaniment is not entirely unlike playing Tchaikovsky's Piano Concerto #1 as horn with piano, Mahler's Symphony #1 as Eb clarinet with piano, or Die Valkure as trombone and piano.
As much as clarinetists like Rhapsody, it's not a clarinet piece.
-Alex
www.mostlydifferent.com
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Author: Tom A
Date: 2006-02-19 04:22
There is an arrangement by a Russian named Dokshitzer (or Dokshitser) for trumpet and piano, published by Reift. A catalogue I've seen lists it as being for trumpets in B flat and C, but I'm pretty sure it's mostly (if not all) for B flat.
A Google search will reveal places you can order it.
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Baldrick, you wouldn't recognise a subtle plan if it painted itself purple and danced naked on a harpsichord singing "Subtle plans are here again". - Edmund Blackadder
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Author: BobD
Date: 2006-02-19 11:27
So.....why don't you just purchase the piano score and play it alone as written.....
Bob Draznik
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