Italian party

The bulk of the musical talk
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Chuck(G)
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Post by Chuck(G) »

"Funiculi Funicula" is a nice one.

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Others I like:

Torna a Surriento
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BopEuph
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Post by BopEuph »

Variations on "Napoli?" :P

O mio Babbino Caro is a popular aria played on the euph, how about that? You could also play a traditional tarantella on the tuba. That might be fun.

Or how about Angelina? Zooma Zooma? Many of these could be found sung by Louis Prima, or any big singer of that time.

Nick
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SplatterTone
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Post by SplatterTone »

Does Love Theme from The Godfather count? Nino Rota was Italian.
Good signature lines: http://tinyurl.com/a47spm
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Chuck(G)
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Post by Chuck(G) »

Anything from "The Rabbit of Seville" would be good:

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dmmorris
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Post by dmmorris »

Anything by Ennio Morricone could be good.

Check out http://www.yo-yoma.com/morricone/
beta 14??..........OK!

Mid 70's B&S Tuba
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SplatterTone
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Post by SplatterTone »

Anything from "The Rabbit of Seville" would be good:
Directed by Leopold, of course!

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Good signature lines: http://tinyurl.com/a47spm
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finnbogi
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Post by finnbogi »

You could play Capuzzi's double bass concerto.

...or Vivaldi's Winter. 8)
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Post by Dutch »

The Carnival of Venice?
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Post by NickJones »

Largo Al Factotum - arr Stephen Roberts
Chamapagne Aria ( from Don Giovanni )
Un furtiva Lagrima - arr Steve Sykes
On with the Motley arr Ray Farr ( I know soprano cornet players have used this for years , but it is a tenor aria so steal it back ).
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Italian solo

Post by Haugan »

Beelzebub.

Let them know what you and the tuba are all about with this "first published solo for tuba" (confirmation,denial regarding claim??) and classic "Taste of Sicily" solo.
There is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so. --Shakespeare

It is my belief, that nearly any invented quotation, played with confidence, stands a good chance to decieve - Mark Twain
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windshieldbug
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Post by windshieldbug »

Ave Maria. Won't be a dry water key in the house.
Instead of talking to your plants, if you yelled at them would they still grow, but only to be troubled and insecure?
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Post by Chuck(G) »

windshieldbug wrote:Ave Maria. Won't be a dry water key in the house.
Whose Ave Maria? Gounod? Seems that he wasn't too eye-tal-eye-an... Bach weren't neither...
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Re: Italian solo

Post by Chuck(G) »

Haugan wrote:Beelzebub.

Let them know what you and the tuba are all about with this "first published solo for tuba" (confirmation,denial regarding claim??) and classic "Taste of Sicily" solo.
Unless it was published prior to 1882, denial:

http://memory.loc.gov/music/sm/sm1882/1 ... 79/002.tif
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SplatterTone
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Post by SplatterTone »

Whose Ave Maria? Gounod? Seems that he wasn't too eye-tal-eye-an... Bach weren't neither...
Schubert neither.
Good signature lines: http://tinyurl.com/a47spm
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Post by imperialbari »

O sole mio.

Don’t forget to put the hook line up 2 octaves. Or 2 octaves down.

Klaus
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Post by finnbogi »

Statman wrote:Next week, I think I will treat my AF students to the Air Force Song
Up in the Air, Junior Birdman?
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Flyboys

Post by Haugan »

.....flying high, into the sun!

The wave of the future, still viewed from left and right with suspicion, BUT........
Destroyer of battleships,
foreign and domestic nearly alike,
Defender of skyscrapers,
transporter to the masses,
oft unheralded for sacrifices above
and beyond the call of duty or otherwise.

In her writings, Kay Redfield Jamison cronicles an event that takes place in her childhood: As a second grader, she witnesses the crash of a jet that barely missed her schoolyard.

She writes: "Over the next few days it became clear, from the release of the young pilot's final message to the control tower before he died,that he knew he could save his own life by bailing out.he also knew, however, that by doing so he risked that his unnaccompanied planewould fall onto the playground and kill those of us who were there." That is the stuff that men are made of.

Food for thought to those of you fortunate enough to be in Ft. Meyer in two weeks. I look forward with relish to my next "Italian Party". In 1980 the Sicilians treated me like royalty; and my fondest memories stem from my Italian vacations as a young man in Europe and later traveling with The Sicilian band of Chicago.

Ave Italia!
There is nothing either good or bad, but thinking makes it so. --Shakespeare

It is my belief, that nearly any invented quotation, played with confidence, stands a good chance to decieve - Mark Twain
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