Remington Trombone warm ups
Blazhevitch
Orchestral excerpt (competition required ones)
Vaughn-Williams
Hindemith Sonate
Tcherepnine
Beelzebub
Concertante
Effie Suite
God, I am so bogged down!
What's on your stand right now?
- Lew
- 5 valves
- Posts: 1700
- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 4:57 pm
- Location: Annville, PA
- Paul S
- 3 valves
- Posts: 397
- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 12:12 am
- Location: St Marys, Ohio
- Contact:
my August stand
My Arban for Tuba and Quintet books (including a nice Rubber Ducky tuba lead arrangement) are on a stool near by but on the stand right now are my orchestral folder for our Summer concert by the Lake for later this month:
Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 2 In C Minor, Op. 17 (Little Russian)
This one is a lot of fun and sometimes is not heard as often as it should be
Handel Allegro Horn Suite in F
tuba basically enforcing the double basses
Smith By Loch & Mountain
generally easy but extremely pretty piece with a lot of things going on and a really nice Tuba solo that trucks along in one
Beethoven Turkish March
moves along but tuba is basic octave jumps reinforcing double basses
Handel March from the Opera Scipio
nice part for F tuba with cellos
Tchaikovsky Symphony No. 2 In C Minor, Op. 17 (Little Russian)
This one is a lot of fun and sometimes is not heard as often as it should be
Handel Allegro Horn Suite in F
tuba basically enforcing the double basses
Smith By Loch & Mountain
generally easy but extremely pretty piece with a lot of things going on and a really nice Tuba solo that trucks along in one
Beethoven Turkish March
moves along but tuba is basic octave jumps reinforcing double basses
Handel March from the Opera Scipio
nice part for F tuba with cellos
Paul Sidey, CCM '84
Principal Tubist, Grand Lake Symphony
B&S PT-606 CC - Yamaha YFB-621 F
SSH Mouthpieces http://sshmouthpieces.com/" target="_blank
Principal Tubist, Grand Lake Symphony
B&S PT-606 CC - Yamaha YFB-621 F
SSH Mouthpieces http://sshmouthpieces.com/" target="_blank
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- 3 valves
- Posts: 337
- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 1:24 am
- Location: Atlanta, GA
- Contact:
Thought I would chime in
On my stand, which I am taking figurativly because I don't have a stand, is college audition music (Prok. 5, Otto Maenz etude, and Hal Leonard method book). And also my own home made warm-up packet. As far as a metronome the Korg metronome is inexpensive, and small, and does everything I need it to, but then again I barely use it. Just my thoughts on the question.
Thomas Peacock
Huttl for life
Schilke 66
Huttl for life
Schilke 66
- imperialbari
- 6 valves
- Posts: 7461
- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 3:47 am
Over the years I have collected several stands.
Here in the midst of our rare and late tropical summer my trombones are not on their stands. Yet I have a few stands standing:
one carries a Conn 26K
one carries a Conn 28K
one carries a Conn 40K
one carries a York Master BBb,
and the last one holds a Besson 981.
Klaus
Here in the midst of our rare and late tropical summer my trombones are not on their stands. Yet I have a few stands standing:
one carries a Conn 26K
one carries a Conn 28K
one carries a Conn 40K
one carries a York Master BBb,
and the last one holds a Besson 981.
Klaus
- Tom Holtz
- Push Button Make Sound
- Posts: 742
- Joined: Tue Mar 23, 2004 3:22 pm
- Location: Location, Location!
Re: Does size matter?
What's up, BK? Good to hear from you. Just heard from the other BK a few days ago, too.bngkastor wrote:Oh - before I get to that - I must say Howdy to Tom Holtz from the USMB - I am still tooting my horn
Get the talking Dr. Beat with the angry woman's voice. Fade out the downbeats and crank the 16ths, so you get her yelling "EE-AND-UH! EE-AND-UH! EE-AND-UH!" at you. There are few sounds more surreal than a tuba player doing slow Rochut etudes with an angry Dr. Beat yelling every step of the way.