What is your taste?
Posted: Tue Jun 12, 2007 11:13 am
What kind of solo music do you most like to play?
At the current time, I like to play solos I can play...UTTuba_09 wrote:What kind of solo music do you most like to play?
1. A solo written as part of an orchestral pieceUTTuba_09 wrote:What kind of solo music do you most like to play?
I love Doc.Doc wrote:Two criteria:
Anything I can drink beer with.
I have to enjoy it. I like, as well as loathe, solos in just about every category.
Doc
I take it you like Holsinger then.Brian Bowman is God wrote:Rythmic stuff from the modern rep that sounds bad@$$ and can get a crowd cheering.
Cosma, Sparke, Gregson, Curnow etc......
Here in the Seattle, Chris Olka was recently featured at the Triple Door (http://www.tripledoor.com/).bloke wrote:Does anyone REALLY perform (in public) tuba solos other than college kids, a few college teachers (those who play well, or are required by their schools to perform solos), the rare community band novelty, and perhaps a handful or two of Baadsvik type of folk?
If you've got a musically-minded church, there should be the occasional opportunity to play a solo piece during a prelude / postlude / offertory. But you probably wouldn't choose a technical / "flashy" piece -- maybe for the postlude. But as I like melodic pieces, there ought to be some nice, simple arrangements of standard hymns out there that might be a bit boring for the performer, but that the audience (congregation) would really enjoy.bloke wrote:Does anyone REALLY perform (in public) tuba solos other than college kids, a few college teachers (those who play well, or are required by their schools to perform solos), the rare community band novelty, and perhaps a handful or two of Baadsvik type of folk?
bloke "a mature not-connected-to-an-ivory-tower-institution adult who feels VERY fortunate to be asked to play a solo or two once every year or two, and usually has to hire his own accompanist - because often the supplied accompanists cannot play the selected literature"