Unaccompanied tuba list
- JayW
- 4 valves
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Well:
Persichetti - Serenade No. 12
Hartley - Suite for unaccompanied tuba
Anderson - Lyri-Tech I
Spillman - Four Greek Preludes
also consider some Bach....either cello suites, or the Bach for Tuba books....some great material there
there is a start...good luck
Persichetti - Serenade No. 12
Hartley - Suite for unaccompanied tuba
Anderson - Lyri-Tech I
Spillman - Four Greek Preludes
also consider some Bach....either cello suites, or the Bach for Tuba books....some great material there
there is a start...good luck
Jay
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You could also try some of the Baroque period unaccompanied flute sonatas by Bach, Telemann and others.
Two octaves down, they fit the range of an F tuba well, but some are not difficult for lower tubas. If you read treble clef, you can just play them from the original flute music. If you do your own copy to bass clef, you could transpose a bit more than two octaves.
Two octaves down, they fit the range of an F tuba well, but some are not difficult for lower tubas. If you read treble clef, you can just play them from the original flute music. If you do your own copy to bass clef, you could transpose a bit more than two octaves.
- adam0408
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- JayW
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I'll second Allen with the baroque flute stuff.....there is SOOOOO much of it out there in print and readily accessible, and as he says...if you read treble cleff, then you are good to go with some great literature. I have a book of Handel Sonatas and Bach Sonatas that I bought from a flute playing friend...and I have been having a lot of fun reading through some of that stuff.... Other stuff just hurts the lips (range) ...
Jay
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proud new owner of a kick arse Eastman 632
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- CJ Krause
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- Leland
- pro musician
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Add a short one --
Intrada in C, by Otto Ketting
Interesting, kinda sad & dramatic, generally no set tonic, but it still feels tonal. Played it in college both on euph on a weekly recital (one of the first unaccompanied brass solos at that school in a long time) and later on G contrabass bugle at my senior recital. I got favorable comments each time.
I think it's written for trumpet, but it sounds fine on anything else, too.
The best thing about programming an unaccompanied piece is that you can use one for almost any instrument.
Intrada in C, by Otto Ketting
Interesting, kinda sad & dramatic, generally no set tonic, but it still feels tonal. Played it in college both on euph on a weekly recital (one of the first unaccompanied brass solos at that school in a long time) and later on G contrabass bugle at my senior recital. I got favorable comments each time.
I think it's written for trumpet, but it sounds fine on anything else, too.
The best thing about programming an unaccompanied piece is that you can use one for almost any instrument.
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- bugler
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I found this page a few weeks ago and maybe this is the kind of thing you are looking for.
http://www.arches.uga.edu/~dzerkel/reso ... abass.html
Ben
http://www.arches.uga.edu/~dzerkel/reso ... abass.html
Ben
- Leland
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- MaryAnn
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- JayW
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- MaryAnn
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