Author: Kat
Date: 2002-07-11 03:10
Seamus, there actually isn't that much G clarinet stuff used in the Balkans. It's pretty much only in Greece and Turkey. In Bulgaria and Macedonia, it's strictly Boehm system stuff, and Full-Boehm in particular in Bulgaria. As far as Albania, it depends on what kind of player you're talking about...village guys play Albert (Bb or C) and state-trained guys play Boehm. I know one Albanian guy who built his own metal C Boehm! In Romania, I've not noticed much for actual clarinet stuff. There they use a lot of tarogot, which is kind of like a wooden soprano sax and sounds like a clarinet plus an oboe plus a soprano sax. Serbians play clarinet, but I haven't really gone into Serbian music the way I have into Bulgarian... The Roma (gypsies) use Boehm (or Full-Boehm) as far as I've seen, but if anyone has any other experience there...speak up!
Learning to play the G is a pain in the BUTT. I have long fingers...and it can hurt stretching far enough to get the holes covered. It helps when you play with other people...you can have a little bit of anonymity and cover-up space!
Christoffer, there is quite a bit of G clarinet in Greek music...despite the usual animosity between the two governments, they share a rather lot of musical stuff...
For Klezmer, the Albert (IMHO) is the best...I don't really play Klezmer, but there's just something about the hejaz mode (phrygish to you klez-folk I think...) on an Albert horn that really sounds GREAT!!!
Katrina
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