Who here plays or has played ophicleide, and what did/do you play?
J.c.S.





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(I'm playing a Courtois)



Actually, I thought rather well. Jay and I had played enough 'cleide that between alternate fingerings and embouchure, intonation was not such a big issue, and the balance between modern instruments and the ophicleides was amazingly pretty good. You have experienced how other players come around once they actually hear an ophicleide.J.c. Sherman wrote:how did the Symph Fantastic go with Delaware Symph?







The G# and F# can both seem temperamental, but I think it's largely conceptual - after spending a few minutes playing in the key of Ab, the note doesn't seem to be a problem. When playing the notes in proximity to each other (such as in a trill or G#-A cadence) I try to use fingerings that will maximise the color differences as much as possible, to reinforce the difference in pitch.J.c. Sherman wrote:Man, 1830 is an old Ophicleide! Never heard of Colmar - got a picture?
Obviously, you have to know 9-key technique regardless, as you can't really move your fingers from the G to the G# chromatically. But on the last ophicleide I used, G# was a monstrous note. F# was great, though...
I agree with the uneven timbre statement, it is part of it's charm. Unstable is what it shouldn't be. Leave that to Serpents (well, some have that under controll too!).
J.c.S.