Bassoon low fingerings
17:42 on Friday, May 30, 2008
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Re: Bassoon low fingerings
11:44 on Saturday, May 31, 2008
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Re: Bassoon low fingerings
22:10 on Saturday, May 31, 2008
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Re: Bassoon low fingerings
22:25 on Saturday, May 31, 2008
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Re: Bassoon low fingerings
06:30 on Sunday, June 1, 2008
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Re: Bassoon low fingerings
10:58 on Sunday, June 1, 2008
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contra448 (771 points)
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"a chaotic jumble of random short notes" That's NO problem for some of us
With a bit of preparation a D whole tone sequence should be possible. A lot depends on the instrument & player though. Go for it!
Low D is one of the tricky notes which tends to be on the sharp side on most bassoons. (I have heard many professional players produce this note slightly high). However given a good bassoon, good reed & competent player it should be OK.
As with low D, high notes depend very much on the bassoon, bocal, reed & player. My limit for reliable attack is high C but a professional ought to be safe up to E.
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Re: Bassoon low fingerings
11:59 on Sunday, June 1, 2008
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Re: Bassoon low fingerings
16:40 on Sunday, June 1, 2008
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Re: Bassoon low fingerings
19:37 on Sunday, June 1, 2008
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tuna (8 points)
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Cheers zoom -
Tempos pretty fast ♩ = c.133 though there is a molto allarg
I've chosen D major purely because it fits the bassoon's range the best and meas that I am able to take advantage of the timbre of the low growling flz, and also the distinctive sound quality of the upper register without it being too hard to play (since the 5th, A, falls in a comfortable range). Also, the 3rd, F#, falls into the middle range which is weak but softly expressive.
No, these extracts are actually what I've written so far but I don't want to do to much without being completly sure of its playability.
The effect I was going for was as the piece enters a new section, the 6 bassoons descend down in a murky whole tone scale of D as the music falls away, crashing onto the lowest D as the contrabassoons are introduced for the first time with a growling flz.
Yeah - from what it seems its a lot more complicated than I thought so I probably will have to get together with a bassoonist though I don't really know many, so forum first then...
I'm working to a deadline of early August, but I won't have time in July because I'm totally away...
Many thanks for your help
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Re: Bassoon low fingerings
21:23 on Friday, April 3, 2009
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Re: Bassoon low fingerings
17:41 on Tuesday, May 12, 2009
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Eliyahu (8 points)
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As band geek points out, double reed players need time to breath. On sustained low notes, a bassoon can go through a lot of air. We recently performed a piece where the bassoon had a very exposed and sustained low C for eight measures. I had to start with my lungs as full as possible and, by the time it was done, I felt like my lungs were collapsing. More importantly, on high notes, a bassoon has the same problem as an English horn or an oboe, in that the player needs places to exhale. Single reed instruments (I also play the various clarinets) generally blow at a rate similar to normal respiration, but double reeds don't take much air except on the lowest notes of the bassoon. Unless you're writing for a virtuoso, it's important to make sure that the average player can play the part without inordinate respiratory demands. The same really applies to all wind instruments, of course. A player shouldn't find himself going into metabolic alkalosis from hypoventilating in order to get to the end of the music.
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