Re: method books
Posted: Tue Apr 14, 2009 1:33 am
http://encoremupub.com/Tuba/tuba.htm" target="_blank
tubashaman2 wrote:I really enjoy Grigoriev and Blazhevich, both books have several lyrical and technical etudes in them, or if you want to take a different route you could buy the Bordogni vocalises along with Kopprasch.
a good jazz method is from Sher Music 'the bass improvisors method' http://www.shermusic.com/tibm.htm. it includes some good discussion of building bass lines, and some transcribed jazz bass solos. as well as lots of ideas for building your own studies to work on.pierso20 wrote: 'snip'
In conjunction with your [the OP's] question about Jazz stuff...
Is there a collection of "canned" solo's written out that could be adapted to tuba? I think it'd be a really cool starting point for someone like me who has little jazz experience to get used to playing jazz SOLO stuff...rather than just a bass line.
If you like the David Uber's music, after he passed his family called me and asked me to help go through his published and unpublished music. In this music, I find a huge pile of tuba etudes and a book of Trombone/Euphonium etudes. With thier blessing, I stuck the music into Finale and put into publication:tubashaman2 wrote: Uber Melodies for tuba or bass trombone (the only one of these mentioned I don't own)