Slang synonyms for mis-articulating a note?
-
Bob Mosso
- bugler

- Posts: 211
- Joined: Wed Jan 12, 2005 2:01 pm
- Location: southern California
- Contact:
Slang synonyms for mis-articulating a note?
There are many... what do you call a mis-articulated note?
flub, frak, blat, ....?
Wasn't there a word that is french horn specific? Maybe when you miss the correct partial and slide into the proper partial?
flub, frak, blat, ....?
Wasn't there a word that is french horn specific? Maybe when you miss the correct partial and slide into the proper partial?
http://www.placentiaband.org/" target="_blank
http://music.fullcoll.edu/groups/cnrtband.shtml" target="_blank
http://music.fullcoll.edu/groups/cnrtband.shtml" target="_blank
- Rick Denney
- Resident Genius
- Posts: 6650
- Joined: Mon Mar 22, 2004 1:18 am
- Contact:
Re: Slang synonyms for mis-articulating a note?
I'll grab "clam" before the easy ones are gone.Bob Mosso wrote:There are many... what do you call a mis-articulated note?
flub, frak, blat, ....?
Wasn't there a word that is french horn specific? Maybe when you miss the correct partial and slide into the proper partial?
Blat isn't a misarticulated note, but rather tone that is too loud for the air feeding it.
"Frak" is what I think of when the start of the note is fractured--not clean, usually from buzzing a different pitch than the tuba wants to resonate.
Rick "whose many clams include a lot of fraks" Denney
-
Bill Troiano
- 5 valves

- Posts: 1132
- Joined: Thu Mar 18, 2004 11:08 pm
- Location: Cedar Park, TX
- GC
- 5 valves

- Posts: 1800
- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 5:52 am
- Location: Rome, GA (between Rosedale and Armuchee)
- Brucom
- bugler

- Posts: 207
- Joined: Sat Jun 24, 2006 10:46 am
- Location: Ohio
- Rick F
- 5 valves

- Posts: 1679
- Joined: Thu Mar 18, 2004 11:47 pm
- Location: Lake Worth, FL
I use 'chip' or 'crack' to describe a missed attack - which happens to me when I'm not buzzing the right pitch the horn wants to sound.
Miraphone 5050 - Warburton BJ/RF mpc
YEP-641S (recently sold), DE mpc (102 rim; I-cup; I-9 shank)
Symphonic Band of the Palm Beaches:
"Always play with a good tone, never louder than lovely, never softer than supported." - author unknown.
YEP-641S (recently sold), DE mpc (102 rim; I-cup; I-9 shank)
Symphonic Band of the Palm Beaches:
"Always play with a good tone, never louder than lovely, never softer than supported." - author unknown.
-
David Zerkel
- pro musician

- Posts: 317
- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 7:30 am
- Location: Ann Arbor, MI
-
Mark
-
tubatooter1940
- 6 valves

- Posts: 2530
- Joined: Mon Mar 22, 2004 11:09 pm
- Location: alabama gulf coast
-
Stefan Kac
- bugler

- Posts: 188
- Joined: Sat Mar 20, 2004 4:56 pm
- Location: Los Angeles
- Contact:
- dtemp
- 3 valves

- Posts: 375
- Joined: Tue Nov 09, 2004 8:16 pm
- Location: Minneapolis, MN
- Contact:
- Chuck(G)
- 6 valves

- Posts: 5679
- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 12:48 am
- Location: Not out of the woods yet.
- Contact:
Re: French horn lingo
Seconded. I like it because the word is what the note attack sounds like!Brucom wrote:French horn players have been known to "fluff" a note.
- The Impaler
- 3 valves

- Posts: 312
- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 9:28 am
- Location: Carrollton, GA
- Contact:
I'm partial to the term "boff," or sometimes, in honor of our tuba-playing brother from Back to the Future, "Biff."
Although, we could just pass it off as jazz and call it an "intentional idiomatic choice."
Although, we could just pass it off as jazz and call it an "intentional idiomatic choice."
Cale Self
Assistant Professor of Music
Acting Director of Bands & Instructor of Low Brass
University of West Georgia
Carrollton, GA
Assistant Professor of Music
Acting Director of Bands & Instructor of Low Brass
University of West Georgia
Carrollton, GA
