fun things to practice

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Do you find lyrical etudes or technical etudes more fun to practice?

 
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MartyNeilan
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Post by MartyNeilan »

I have done an arrangement of the complete first movement of Winter from Vivaldi's four seasons for my H.S. orchestra. While I have had to water down many of the parts (and transpose the whole thing from F minor to E minor because many of my strings can't play flats) I have kept the solo violin part true to form, filled with 32 note runs throughout. Since I have it on Finale, I decided to bump it down 2 octaves into bass clef and spend about an hour working on it tonight on F tuba. Still don't have it completely up to tempo, but it was a blast to practice. Then, I spent a few minutes running the 3rd movement of the Bach Brandenburg Concerto #2, reading straight off the original trumpet (in F) part.

Who says we can't play the good stuff once in a while! :D
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sc_curtis
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Disagreement

Post by sc_curtis »

I disagree...I don't know what the "ARBANS" is....

BUT, the Arban book provides many excellent opportunities for fun.

(Sorry, I couldn't resist!)
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Kevin Hendrick
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Re: Disagreement

Post by Kevin Hendrick »

sc_curtis wrote:...I don't know what the "ARBANS" is....

BUT, the Arban book provides many excellent opportunities for fun.
Seems like an "Arban-trary" distinction to me ... :wink:
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Post by CrappyEuph »

I enjoy practicing Arban's articulation studies, especially the last one with the dotted-sixteenth-thirty-second pattern.
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Yep

Post by David »

Do I hear concerto for two violins?

Comon!
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Brassdad
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Re: Yep

Post by Brassdad »

David wrote:Do I hear concerto for two violins?

Comon!
Just stay away from the sax and violins!
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Post by phoenix »

Snedecors are a blast
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Re: fun things to practice

Post by WoodSheddin »

thetubachick wrote:What do you guys find to be the most fun types of pieces or excercises to practice?
Bach Cello Suites
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Yep

Post by David »

Let's be realistic. Anything penned by Bach, is always fun to play...
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windshieldbug
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Post by windshieldbug »

Image
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Yep

Post by David »

I have been thus corrected...
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windshieldbug
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Post by windshieldbug »

Sorry; couldn't help myself :oops:
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Post by windshieldbug »

thetubachick wrote:I was a bit curious to find out if you guys preferred articulate exercises or melodic exercises and pieces…the whole technical vs. lyrical type of thing.
I have to admit that I much prefer lyrical... even though I probably need the technical more :)
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Post by tubeast »

I practise lyrical and sound-improving studies the most. I´m sure I could (and should) use a good deal of technical studies as well, but given the literature I encounter the most, lots of sound is what´s called upon.

Asked for fun stuff to practise, though, I´d say "Enter Sandman" and "Sad but true" by Metallica would be fun enough.
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Post by Rick Denney »

bloke wrote:[not the answer you're looking for, I'd imagine]

stuff that I cannot play very well...and continuing to raise the standard on any particular piece as pertains to "stuff that I cannot play very well"
Yup.

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Post by tubeast »

Where did you get ahold of those?
Well, get the CD, listen, and start playing.
I don´t know, maybe "Apocalyptica" from Finland will have written scores of those, (having rearranged M´s pieces for Cello quartet). I have no idea if these scores are published, but it´s fairly easy to just do the main riffs that everybody can whistle.
It´s a great idea to do those in all kinds of keys,by the way, and not depend on written notes that much.
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Post by Mike Finn »

tubeast wrote: Asked for fun stuff to practise, though, I´d say "Enter Sandman" and "Sad but true" by Metallica would be fun enough.
heh heh, reminds me of a story I read here: http://maxpages.com/lowfrequencies/Metallica_on_Tuba :shock:

Be sure to have your pop-up blocker running. :x

Fun stuff I've been playing lately includes lots of Irish Jigs, Reels, and Fiddle tunes for technical practise (in all keys) and ballads like "The Rose of Tralee" for melodic. So I guess you could say "both" if that was an option on the poll.
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Post by TonyZ »

I (like Mike Finn) like to work on Scottish and Irish pipe and fiddle tunes. Great music, and a great workout!
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Re: fun things to practice

Post by Wilco »

Matt Higgins wrote:
WoodSheddin wrote:
thetubachick wrote:What do you guys find to be the most fun types of pieces or excercises to practice?
Bach Cello Suites
Do you play then transposed or at 8va?
I like to play them too! I play them as written, it's not that high.....
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