high g#: Bydlo vs. VW concerto

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windshieldbug
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Post by windshieldbug »

Playing with a professional symphony IS NOT LIKE A SPORTING EVENT. You do not do "the best you can". It is your duty to give your audience what the shelled out hard currency for. EVERY TIME.

You don't do it until you can't miss. You do it until you can do it on your worst day, when your significant other has just left with the pool person after a shouting match in the car that contained ALL of your good horns and every mouthpiece you owned, leaving you to do it with a Dylan fiberglass BBb Sousaphone.

And the ushers don't put notes about what you're up against in the programs, nor does the conductor make any announcements to the audience about it, either. If they do say anything, it'll be an amusing "a funny thing happened to me on the way to the concert" story, or about how Barber's School For Scandal overture was actually written about the obedience training class for his pet terrier, Scandal.

All that said, I like the way it sounds done on a 6/4 F. It feels more secure done on a euphonium. I don't think it matters what the picture was, what Modest meant, or even what Ravel had in mind. It's what the conductor wants (no matter how wrong I think they might be), for what I consider to be a very lyrical solo, with a driving accompanyment. And if I can't do that, I picked the wrong business. :shock:
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Post by Chuck(G) »

tbn.al wrote:There is an interesting argument that the "Ox Cart" title is really a polictical smokescreen. What do you guys think?
Search the archives. "Bydlo" (however it's spelled) does not mean an oxcart in Russian or Polish. It does, however, carry a connotation of peasantry or rabble in both languages. (It literally means "cattle". Image Google it, but with the Polish spelling of "Bydło" and see if you see any oxcarts.) I think there's something to the claim by the article you cited.
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Post by iiipopes »

Bullshit. It's all bullshit. It's just a piece of music. Descriptive, yes. Descriptive of what, well, have the musicological debate. Technically difficult, so what. Just play it. Being a band player, and not an orchestra tubist, I'll never have the opportunity to play it. So you can rag me all you want. I'll stand up and say I resemble that remark. I've had my share of similar top of the mountain tests, both in the context of music and the other jobs I've had. PM and I'll tell you what real stress is in the context of holding other people's lives in your hand with every word you say in front of a court jury. It's all attitude. Either you prepare yourself properly with attitude, practice, context, instrument and mindset to play it properly and in concert with whatever orchestra you're with and under whatever the director wants, or you don't and shouldn't play it. When you prepare yourself properly, it just happens like it should. Bydlo just happens to be the piece in the tuba repertoire like this. Ask any pianist about Rach III, or trumpet player about Haydn, opera soloist about just about anything by Wagner, etc., and it's the same scenario. Those who can, do; those who can't bitch about it on a forum.
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Post by Art Hovey »

I think it sounds best on a euphonium played by a real euphonium player. I heard an excellent and well-known tubist play it at a conference some years ago using a wide but shallow "cheater" mouthpiece on a euphonium, and it wasn't bad. An hour later I heard an excellent euphonium player and asked him to play the same passage. He sounded better.

But I certainly admire the way Alan Baer nailed it with the NY Phil a couple of months ago, on F tuba. (link was posted here.)

I am also surprised that no one has mentioned how well it lies for Eb tuba. I heard a Russian orchestra do it a few years ago; the tubist played most of the concert on a King BBb, but picked up a top-action 3-valve Eb tuba for the Bydlo and made it sing.
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Post by djwesp »

tubaeuph wrote:Not a bright crappy (british) Besson sound.


Is this a joke?
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Post by LoyalTubist »

Actually, the one time I played Pictures at an Exhibition, I thought about playing Bydlo on an eefer. The conductor said he was willing but the board of directors already had a euphonium player (trombonist) in mind.

As far as the Vaughan Williams concerto, the tessitura is a little lower. I played it for my Junior Recital on a CC tuba and I have heard it performed quite well on a large bore BBb tuba.
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Post by RSMorgan »

A musicological cleanup, and an organological note:

When he commissioned this orchestration from Ravel, Koussevitzky was not yet conductor of the BSO. However, on the train from New York to Boston as he traveled to assume his new post there, he asked about the ability of the tuba player in Boston, as he had this wonderful new piece by Ravel. . .

While the length of the French tuba in C makes it a step higher than a euphonium, its bore was larger, and it commonly had 6 valves, both items allowing it to play the rest of Pictures--even the low stuff--appropriately, and not sound quite like a euphonium.

I've had the privilege of playing it twice--once many years ago, and poorly (I'd just gotten my B&S F), and once a couple of years ago quite decently, though not perfectly (still trying to prove my manly tubaness). I've considered it on euph, but even though my high chops are fairly transferrable to euph, I'm still more comfortable playing it on F.

Those days are gone, though. I'm just glad I had the opportunity to play Bydlo again one last time that couple of years ago.

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Post by TubaRay »

iiipopes wrote: It's all attitude. Either you prepare yourself properly with attitude, practice, context, instrument and mindset to play it properly and in concert with whatever orchestra you're with and under whatever the director wants, or you don't and shouldn't play it.
I believe this is largely true. Attitude is a great determiner(is that a word?) in life.
iiipopes wrote:When you prepare yourself properly, it just happens like it should.
Again, this is mostly true, however, nothing is 100%.
iiipopes wrote:Those who can, do; those who can't bitch about it on a forum.
This seems a bit harsh. There's nothing particularly wrong with discussing the matter. Discussing doesn't alway equal bitching.
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Post by Chuck(G) »

the elephant wrote:Gee, it is as though no one read the very long thread that I posted about this a while back. (sincker, snicker...)

Chuck, no one will remember us when we are gone! Alas!

8) :lol:
In my case, that's probably a good thing for the global collective (in)sanity. :)

Personally, I like to hear it played on horn, but that's a different orchestration. I've also wondered about what the solo would sound like on ocarina or nose flute. I just tried it on slide whistle and it's pretty interesting if you imagine the cattle to be a herd of crazed gerbils.
:P
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Post by windshieldbug »

bloke wrote:What the earth would be like if "people on the internet" had created it:

Image
Well, then it's a good thing that it's credited to Al Gore! :shock: :D
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Post by MikeMason »

I think your taste will change the more you dig in to orchestral studies.I can't imagine those promenades,or Great Gate on anything but a big contrabass...JMHO...
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windshieldbug
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Post by windshieldbug »

the elephant wrote:Gee, it is as though no one read the very long thread that I posted about this a while back. (sincker, snicker...)

Chuck, no one will remember us when we are gone! Alas!
It'll all be Bob1062's Party!!! :P :roll:
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Post by tbn.al »

the elephant wrote:Gee, it is as though no one read the very long thread that I posted about this a while back. (sincker, snicker...)
Actually I almost quoted your thread instead of the outside source. IMHO it's a really neat piece of music, end of story.
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Post by eupher61 »

Bob1062 wrote: Yeah, those little French C tubas were dark as all get out!
you've never played one, obviously.
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windshieldbug
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Post by windshieldbug »

bloke wrote:Those sorts of excuses are reserved for singers, are they not?
After all, that's what singing vibrato was invented for...

(measured in yards, not beats!) :shock:
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Post by TubaRay »

Bob1062 wrote: I bet I can out-blow you anyday. :lol:
I'm convinced you can!
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