Sea Interludes from Peter Grimes
- finnbogi
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Sea Interludes from Peter Grimes
I just found out that I am supposed to play the fourth of Britten's Sea Interludes from Peter Grimes a week from now.
The first rehearsal is on Tuesday, but the music isn't in yet.
Does anybody remember this part? Is it sight reading material or will I need to get a copy somewhere and practise?
The first rehearsal is on Tuesday, but the music isn't in yet.
Does anybody remember this part? Is it sight reading material or will I need to get a copy somewhere and practise?
Besson 981 Eb
Melton 195 BBb (Fafner)
Conn 71H bass trombone
Melton 195 BBb (Fafner)
Conn 71H bass trombone
- Roger Lewis
- pro musician

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As I recall....
That is the storm scene. Make sure you have a rock solid low F, 4 ledger lines down. That's all I remember from about a million years ago. Other than hyperventilation and temporary deafness, there is not a lot to worry about in this movement.
Good luck - it's a fun piece.
Roger
Good luck - it's a fun piece.
Roger
"The music business is a cruel and shallow trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free and good men die like dogs. There's also a negative side." Hunter S Thompson
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tbn.al
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Cast off the bow lines! Ready the depth charges! I did it a year or two ago, Bass Trombone of course. The tuba part is pretty much an octave down throughout. I believe it goes to the low D if memory serves. There is nothing to worry about from a sight reading standpoint. You had better bring your huge lungs though.
I am fortunate to have a great job that feeds my family well, but music feeds my soul.
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Chuck Jackson
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Ok, everyone remembers the loud fracking stuff in this piece. If you practice that way before you go to your first rehearsal, you may have egg on your face if you can't play the first ppppp note that you play. It is a very touchy entrance, far more exposed than the rest . Good Luck, nice piece for what it is.
Chuck
Chuck
I drank WHAT?!!-Socrates
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tbn.al
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The loud stuff is all the fun! Low brass creed and all. You are right though. Our guy nailed the ppp note in performance after whiffing in rehearsal. Egg is yellow if I remember correctly.Chuck Jackson wrote:Ok, everyone remembers the loud fracking stuff in this piece. If you practice that way before you go to your first rehearsal, you may have egg on your face if you can't play the first ppppp note that you play. It is a very touchy entrance, far more exposed than the rest . Good Luck, nice piece for what it is.
Chuck
I am fortunate to have a great job that feeds my family well, but music feeds my soul.
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Chuck Jackson
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- keronarts
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Hi finnbogi--
Am looking right now at my copy of the part for this and, per usual, Chuck J is almost right. The 1st mvmt ["Dawn"] has a tuba entrance on a low A @ ppp, sostenuto. That mvmt doesn't get loud till 10 measures from 4 -- mostly low, sustained background-type colorings.
Even "Moonlight" [Mvmt III] has that strong low F -- but it's f. Mostly quarter notes/ half notes & soft.
The "Storm" [Mvmt IV], as mentioned by Roger, etc -- does have several low F's -- marked @ f or sf -- along with some low E's -- same dynamic. Tempo here is Presto con fuoco. The mid-section of this might have the biggest technical demand -- which isn't much [some eighth-quarters ...], but then you slow WAAYYY down to largamente with a low E @ ppp , and Chuck is right on the money with some "sound" advice on the coloring issue. You have to be strong down there, but by no means crass -- and watch out for the land mines that are the soft sections. Certainly do-able ... your best friends in prepping for this might be long tones, and thinking about placement and timing.
Hope this helps ... best of luck with this.
Am looking right now at my copy of the part for this and, per usual, Chuck J is almost right. The 1st mvmt ["Dawn"] has a tuba entrance on a low A @ ppp, sostenuto. That mvmt doesn't get loud till 10 measures from 4 -- mostly low, sustained background-type colorings.
Even "Moonlight" [Mvmt III] has that strong low F -- but it's f. Mostly quarter notes/ half notes & soft.
The "Storm" [Mvmt IV], as mentioned by Roger, etc -- does have several low F's -- marked @ f or sf -- along with some low E's -- same dynamic. Tempo here is Presto con fuoco. The mid-section of this might have the biggest technical demand -- which isn't much [some eighth-quarters ...], but then you slow WAAYYY down to largamente with a low E @ ppp , and Chuck is right on the money with some "sound" advice on the coloring issue. You have to be strong down there, but by no means crass -- and watch out for the land mines that are the soft sections. Certainly do-able ... your best friends in prepping for this might be long tones, and thinking about placement and timing.
Hope this helps ... best of luck with this.
- Wyvern
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- finnbogi
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Thanks for the answers everyone! It looks like I don't have to worry too much about the part itself, but I still hope it arrives before the first rehearsal.
And Bob, since most of the programme is arias by Verdi, Puccini, Donizetti et al. (essentially cimbasso parts) and the other orchestral piece I get to play in is the overture to La forza del destino, I was planning on using my Besson for the entire concert. I may have to reconsider this, though.
Thanks again,
Finnbogi
And Bob, since most of the programme is arias by Verdi, Puccini, Donizetti et al. (essentially cimbasso parts) and the other orchestral piece I get to play in is the overture to La forza del destino, I was planning on using my Besson for the entire concert. I may have to reconsider this, though.
Thanks again,
Finnbogi
Besson 981 Eb
Melton 195 BBb (Fafner)
Conn 71H bass trombone
Melton 195 BBb (Fafner)
Conn 71H bass trombone
- finnbogi
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- Wyvern
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