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Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2007 12:56 am
by clagar777
Along with Bordogni etudes and some orchestral excerpts I am working on stuff for my shared junior recital in April:
Strauss, Horn Concerto No.I
Bach, Flute Sonata No.II
Ponce, Estrellita (ordered)
... also looking for a good tuba/oboe duet
Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2007 5:22 am
by Dylan King
Nowhere Man by The Beatles.
Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2007 5:31 am
by NickJones
Isaiah 40 - Robert Redhead
Ballet for Band - Josef Horowitz
Fnugg Blue - Oystein Baadsvik
Concertino for Tuba - Philip Sparke
Bach Cello Suites
Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2007 7:07 am
by Pure Sound
Malcom Arnold Fantasy for Tuba
Arban
Kopprasch
Bordogni
VW six studies in english folksong
various orchy excerpts
Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2007 7:40 am
by tubafatness
Mainly audition stuff, plus some other things for fun.
Mainly consists of:
Hindemith Sonata
Bordogni, (the 120 etude book)
Arban's
Snedecor Low Etudes
Tyrell BBb advanced studies
And whatever music I happen to find in the course of the day
ON my stand
Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2007 8:48 am
by Sean Greene
tuba playing stand:

My "Episodes" for tuba & piano
Kopprasch book
Rochut book
Persichetti Serenade
Malcolm Arnold Fantasy
Saint Saens "Morceau de Concert"
Jerry Coker's "Patterns for Improvisation"
Arias for Baritone collection
Brahms Lieder Book
conducting stand:
Army of the Nile - Alford
Ritual - Stevens
An American in Paris - Gershwin
Symphonic Psalm - Claude T. Smith
Blue Bells of Scotland - Pryor
A Louis Armstrong Tribute
Contrapunctus IX - arr. Andy Clark
teaching stand:
The Art of Tuba & Euphonium (low brass methods)
Score Study for the Wind Band Conductor (adv. conducting)
The Modern Conductor (adv. conducting)
Rubank Intermediate Method (low brass methods)
Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2007 10:50 am
by tubatooter1940
"Humanity Night at the Redneck Riviera" By Jim Hoen -recording it-
"My Baby Loves Baby Back Ribs" (my favorite line: If my baby lives to sixty three, ain't gonna be a cow left alive in Tennessee)
"Just Seventeen" by John Reno-recording it- "Ain't Misbehavin'" -Leon Redbone arrangement
"I Wanna Talk About Me" by Toby Keith
"I love Older Women" by Rodney Carrington (that one's just for after hours-adults only)
Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2007 11:00 am
by ASTuba
Mostly working on grad school audition stuff:
RVW - Concerto
John Steves - Journey
Ellerby - Concerto (will be performing this with the Syracuse University Brass Ensemble)
Orchestral Excerpts
Rochut
Kopprasch
Barbara York - 3 Romances for Susie
Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2007 1:39 pm
by windshieldbug
Many volumes of the Torchinsky Orchestral Excerpts
Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2007 2:47 pm
by dmmorris
lots of ragtime (max morath type stuff mostly).....the charts are treble clef melody lines with the chords roots written in pencil. Sometimes I'm lucky to get a piano part.
........then in a week or two, that will be displaced by the annual round of honky-tonk music in prep' for Mardi Gras. Different music, but the charts will be of similar ilk.
Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2007 6:53 pm
by Steve Marcus
Philip Sparke's Dances & Alleluias, on which a few other TubeNet readers are working for our performances in April at NABBA...
It's a great piece, isn't it?
Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2007 8:49 pm
by tubaguy9
Well, Well, Well...
1.)Sonata fron Die Bankelsangerlieder; arr. King
2.)Three Revolutionary Marches; B. Smetant, arr. Vaclav Nelhybel
3.)Mannin Veen; Haydn Wood
4.)Folk Dances; Dmitri Shostakovich, Edit. H. Robert Reynolds
5.)La Procession Du Rocio; Joaquin Turina, Arr. Alfred Reed
6.)Huldigungsmarsch; Richard Wagner, arr. William A. Schaefer,
7.)Rosalind in the Forest of Arden; Alfred Reed
8.)Fanfare and Flourishes; James Curnow
9.)Daniel in the Lion's Den; W. Francis McBeth (not the solo

)
10.)His Honor March; unkown-top cut off
11.)Inchon; Robert W. Smith
12.)Courtly Airs and Dances; Ron Nelson
13.)Festivo; Edward Gregson
14.)Three Chorale Preludes, #II; William P. Latham
15.)Americans We; Henry Fillmore, Edit. Frederick Fennell
16.) Sundance; Frank Ticheli
17.)Vox Superius; Melvyn Poore
18.) (boring piece) Grant Them Eternal Rest; Andrew Boysen, Jr.
If I get bored with all that, I can go do some Bordogni...or some C. Kopprasch...or Tuba Ditty...or Saucedo...or Jabba...or the pic solo for Stars & Stripes...and I forgot to mention...
19.) Six Preludes for Tuba and Flute; Harry Hewitt,
finally,
20.)Ai; Michael E. Edgerton
Is that enough? I also have the musician stuff, such as oil, pencil, etc...
[quote=ebarr]-Introduction and Dance (Barat)[/quote]
fun piece!
Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2007 9:27 pm
by tubaguy9
EuphManRob wrote:Bored??

Tell me you're joking. Not only is that a lot of music, that's a lot of GOOD music.
Folk Dances,
La Procession du Rocio,
Fanfare and Flourishes,
Courtly Airs and Dances,
Festivo,
Sundance, plus
His Honor and
Americans We - those are all fine pieces, lots of merit, each one of them. Those should be more than enough to keep you plenty musically challenged, not to mention technically.
P.S.: the composer of
His Honor is Henry Fillmore.
No, none of them
except Grant Them Eternal Rest is boring...
As I'm writing this, I'm recovering from being extremely lightheaded from Mannin Veen...
Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2007 10:31 pm
by fpoon
Whatever I feel like! Gosh!
Posted: Tue Jan 16, 2007 10:51 pm
by KevinMadden
for lessons:
Bordogni and Rochut
Tyrell adv. studies for BBb bass
Gallay "12 Grandes Etudes Brilliants"
Wilder: Effie Suite
Penn : Cappricio for Tuba and Marimba
Carnival of Venice (my first attempt at f tuba)
Band:
(some things I cant' remember at this moment, but notably)
Hindemith: Symphony in Bb