The Oboe BBoard
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Author: HautboisJJ
Date: 2006-06-12 00:46
The stuffy middle C# is what i experience too. But in the hands of a professional (in this case my teacher) it becomes nothing but a myth, on a good instrument that is, and the same reed! I find that if the low G is well in tune, as well as using the "low A slurred to C# then to D -> and all well in tune" rule, the usual problematic notes that Susan encounters (so do i!) will usually become easy and won't bother as much. Stuffy middle C# is usually a sign of too much reed in mouth. And middle Ab seems to be a little bit on the sharp and bright side too if not handled well.
I personally think that middle E and A is difficult on the oboe because they are never really that stable. But of course that must be me. =(
Johnng, as for your question, i find that passages with sharp keys tends to be a bit more difficult to control in terms of intonation. For example the Tchaikovsky Swan Lake excerpts are always difficult to play in tune. In fact, almost every standard excerpt i know in the repertoire has its own challenges. For example, the whimsical solos in Schubert's 9th symphony has tons of E's.
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johng |
2006-06-11 14:40 |
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ohsuzan |
2006-06-11 19:28 |
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Re: difficult intonation passages new |
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HautboisJJ |
2006-06-12 00:46 |
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shannon |
2006-07-10 05:18 |
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GMac |
2006-06-13 19:02 |
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mschmidt |
2006-06-13 19:47 |
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GMac |
2006-06-14 04:00 |
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HautboisJJ |
2006-06-14 12:59 |
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Demonxz |
2006-06-15 13:30 |
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Kai |
2006-06-15 15:47 |
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The Clarinet Pages
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