in my experience it is:
1/3 of the brass players tune backstage,1/3 don't tune at all, 1/3 are busy practicing the opening slurs
a combination that seems to work great, or fail great
John


Totally agree--Having played "Fanfare" more than a couple of times, I know that if the brass section has any intonation issues, this is NOT the piece to play, especially not to be used as an opener. Either you play it WELL or you will crash and burn--there is no in-between.John Banther wrote:Bloke,
in my experience it is:
1/3 of the brass players tune backstage,1/3 don't tune at all, 1/3 are busy practicing the opening slurs
a combination that seems to work great, or fail great![]()
John

When I played in university orchestras I usually did the same thing as bloke - just sat there playing nothing.Mark wrote:I like to play a pedal A. It gets my chops all loose and ready to go.bloke wrote:I usually play "nothing at all" when an "A" is given...even if "for the brass". If I play anything at all, it will probably be a "D".arpthark wrote:Noodling around when the tuning note is given. Also "tuning up" your major thirds, minor thirds, major seconds, etc. Tonal centers and your place in the chord are all relative - if the group is tuning to an A and you tune up your C# based on that A, it won't necessarily be in-tune in C# major tonality, and so on.


Neither will A.arpthark wrote:Noodling around when the tuning note is given. Also "tuning up" your major thirds, minor thirds, major seconds, etc. Tonal centers and your place in the chord are all relative - if the group is tuning to an A and you tune up your C# based on that A, it won't necessarily be in-tune in C# major tonality, and so on.

I see no practical or "aesthetic" reason for a dress or skirt.J.c. Sherman wrote: 2) Women's outfits. I'm in formal attire. So should you be. Dress, slacks, whatever, a black long-sleeved t-shirt and black... “pants” are crude.
Another peeve of mine- socially mandated face scraping. I never shave outside of the Army (sometimes not even in, profile for the win!). Why would I?shave (unless you're actively growing a beard - I've caught flack for that, admittedly and deservedly).


You're going to have to explain your thought.J.c. Sherman wrote:Bob, for the same reason you do it in the Army. And your older peers appreciate it.

My older pears have noticed when I don't shave. Perhaps it's generational, but I'm in a business where getting along and being recognized for my performance and my comportment in all respects is important. It makes my life more profitable, more facile, and more pleasant. When I do grow a beard (annually), I catch flack. But it's shaped and manicured instantly, and I'm well enough known that it's more of a ribbing I get than anything else. But my neck is shaved.Bob Kolada wrote:You're going to have to explain your thought.J.c. Sherman wrote:Bob, for the same reason you do it in the Army. And your older peers appreciate it.


J.c. Sherman wrote:My older pears have noticed when I don't shave. Perhaps it's generational, but I'm in a business where getting along and being recognized for my performance and my comportment in all respects is important. It makes my life more profitable, more facile, and more pleasant. When I do grow a beard (annually), I catch flack. But it's shaped and manicured instantly, and I'm well enough known that it's more of a ribbing I get than anything else. But my neck is shaved.Bob Kolada wrote:You're going to have to explain your thought.J.c. Sherman wrote:Bob, for the same reason you do it in the Army. And your older peers appreciate it.
Perhaps the answer is the same as in the military. Because. At one time my father (Navy) had to shave from a beard he'd had my whol life (January 1, 1985). By god he didn't ask why






Please accept my gratitude for leaving more gigs out there for us old guys.Bob Kolada wrote:[As for what old people think, when they stop lecturing me on every/anything I'll start caring what they think.
Game, set, match...bloke wrote:I have a leg up on Bob; He isn't particularly old, and I already don't care what he thinks.

Bad back, permanently injured shoulders, bad eyes, loathes kids,... I'm already old by default.bloke wrote:I have a leg up on Bob; He isn't particularly old, and I already don't care what he thinks.
That's just part of me giving back to the community!TubaRay wrote:Please accept my gratitude for leaving more gigs out there for us old guys.Bob Kolada wrote:[As for what old people think, when they stop lecturing me on every/anything I'll start caring what they think.![]()

Mr. Sherman certainly knows these players, but for those who don't, that's the Los Angeles Phil. brass section in the 1970's. Roger Bobo is cut-off from the picture but you can see his F contrabass trumpet on the right.J.c. Sherman wrote: How old's that photo? Amish Bass trumpeters!

sloan wrote:There's a word for people who perform certain acts "only when paid to do so".