Meaning of "bassoon intonation"?
21:57 on Sunday, August 12, 2012
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Re: Meaning of bassoon intonation?
08:33 on Monday, August 20, 2012
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Re: Meaning of bassoon intonation?
22:35 on Monday, August 20, 2012
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Re: Meaning of bassoon intonation?
16:57 on Wednesday, August 29, 2012
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khsron (17 points)
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Thanks, Contra and Drew. With your comments and some more reading and cogitation of my own, I have come to think that the term "intonation" encompasses all of the following: how easy it is to tune the tuning note; the instrument's tendency to deviate from that pitch; tendency to deviate from an even scale (relative intonation); ease or difficulty of varying pitches to blend with the other members of an ensemble; ease or difficulty of varying pitches for reasons of artistic expression.
In the Fox Company's advertising some bassoons and some bocals are described as giving "flexible" intonation, suitable for, say, first-chair performance, while other are described as giving "stable" intonation, suitable for, say, second-chair performance or less-experienced players. I suppose that negative spins on these terms would be, respectively, "unstable" (meaning "requiring more skill to control") and "inflexible" (meaning "requiring more effort to vary on purpose").
(By the way, when I said that only Heckel and Fox seemed to be approved by everyone, I did not mean that all others were universally rejected. I meant that the other brands got mixed reviews. For example, one person says that Selmer makes a fair beginner bassoon, while someone else includes Selmer on his list of junk. One person raves about Takeda, while another is not familiar with it but suspects it is no good. And so on, and so on.)
Back to the subject of intonation... It seems plausible to me that one of the factors contributing to the bassoon's random tendencies is the configuration of the tone holes, that is, their locations, lengths and obliqueness relative to the bore. Why don't bassoon makers take their cue from the saxophones, the larger clarinets and even the larger flutes and place the tone holes where they would make more sense acoustically and cover them with pads controlled with finger keys placed where they would be convenient?
Could it be that 200 years from now the bassoons of today will be considered "early bassoons" as opposed to "modern bassoons"? What do you think about the development of the bassoon? Is it fairly complete or does it have a long way to go?
Thanks again,
Ron
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Re: Meaning of bassoon intonation?
20:59 on Wednesday, August 29, 2012
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Re: Meaning of bassoon intonation?
14:32 on Monday, September 3, 2012
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Re: Meaning of bassoon intonation?
01:51 on Friday, December 14, 2012
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Scotch (660 points)
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Why don't bassoon makers take their cue from the saxophones, the larger clarinets and even the larger flutes and place the tone holes where they would make more sense acoustically and cover them with pads controlled with finger keys placed where they would be convenient? |
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According to Walter Piston's Orchestration, it's because you would inevitably lose all that is distinctive (and valued) about a bassoon's basic timbre.
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Re: Meaning of bassoon intonation?
19:30 on Thursday, January 17, 2013
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Re: Meaning of bassoon intonation?
16:27 on Saturday, January 19, 2013
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Re: Meaning of bassoon intonation?
12:05 on Sunday, January 27, 2013
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