My story
17:43 on Wednesday, January 2, 2008
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thebluesbox (17 points)
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Hello everyone I have commented on a couple of posts before actaully introducing myself. I played trumpet for about 10 years, I play 3 times a week in my church band. I also play various other instruments such as drum set fill in, percussion congas djembe etc. I play native flutes, Flugal horn, and Im pretty nifty with spoons :-)
I have recently been stuned by the sound of the french horn that I prolly have heard a lotta times in my life but it just struck me a few days ago and I love the awesome range of sounds. It struck me so much that I gotta give it a try, I got into playing flugal horn as a second brass double to give me the sound that actually comes from a french horn. While the flugal does a decent job as being a little more mellow of a sound from the trumpet the horn is really the sound I was after all this time and didnt know it till now.
I have read online some place that doubling trumpet and french horn isnt a good idea, but Im one that likes to take a new challenge and prove somethings can be done, and I love this sound so much im going to give it a shot. I did a little research on horns, music, the technicals of them and all. I know the ticket is a double horn but I cant afford one now so Im going to start with a single Bb the reason I chose the Bb is I hope for the right reason.... because everything else I play or have played was or is in Bb in that thinking I went with a single Bb, it does have the 4th key which isnt a key switching valve its a stop valve supposed to do the same as stop horn with hand in bell I think and has nothing to do with changing the key because its a single horn. I have read some good about starting in a single Bb and natrally I have read some other opinions on why its not a good idea, but my thinking is its way cheaper and Im sort of testing the waters right now and I rather test them with a cheaper single horn first to see if I like it and will continue on with it.
Any do's dont's tips, I would appreciate.
please dont bash me beacause I jumped in with both feet with out knowing much about french horn playing and grabbed a cheap horn to get started on. It was either this or nothing at all and I wanted to at least give it a shot. I did read a post about fingering troubles with a Bb singlr horn what sort of chart would I need for this horn that doesnt assume Im playing an F/Bb with the 4th valve pressed? Can I get that online?
thanks in advance Im glad to find this forum and I look forward to chatting music with you guys it looks like a great place to be!!!
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Re: My story
17:59 on Wednesday, January 2, 2008
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Re: My story
18:42 on Wednesday, January 2, 2008
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Re: My story
19:22 on Wednesday, January 2, 2008
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Re: My story
19:29 on Wednesday, January 2, 2008
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Re: My story
04:55 on Thursday, January 3, 2008
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Re: My story
07:38 on Thursday, January 3, 2008
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Re: My story
08:36 on Thursday, January 3, 2008
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Re: My story
08:36 on Thursday, January 3, 2008
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Re: My story
08:36 on Thursday, January 3, 2008
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Re: My story
09:00 on Thursday, January 3, 2008
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JOhnlovemusic (1279 points)
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Here is a fingering chart I like better.
http://boerger.org/horn/finger.shtml
Remember your primary goal is to learn the Bb fingerings and they will work when you play music written for Horn in F.
Second goal is to learn the F Horn fingerings. Then you can use these to 'cheat' when transposing Bb instruments.
Of course to be a real horn player you will want to learn to tranpose correctly, eventually. And you do want to learn to transpose. Imagine this, last year I was hired to play at a wedding. It was going to be a WoodWind Quintet and String Quartet playing separately and then together as a Nonnet. We were not going to see the music until we got to the site (we met at a University parking lot and were transported by Secret Service to the wedding location - President Clinton was at the wedding as a guest). We get there and the guests are arriving and they place the books in front of us on music stands and say GO. The first piece was written for Horn in F, The second piece was Horn in D, Horn in F, Horn in G, Horn in Bb basso, and finally Horn in C.
Always remember Horn playing is fun. There are higher expectations from the Horn section, always have been and always will be. It is the nature of the fluke of music world. But you will always get more accolades than others. Everyone thinks it's the hardest instrument, let them think it.
JOhn
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Re: My story
09:33 on Thursday, January 3, 2008
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Re: My story
10:11 on Thursday, January 3, 2008
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Re: My story
12:49 on Thursday, January 3, 2008
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Re: My story
00:10 on Wednesday, January 9, 2008
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thebluesbox (17 points)
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I have one more question, on this chart http://boerger.org/horn/finger.shtml
sense I have a single Bb horn the chart shows fingering for F/Bb-w-slide... which do I use the F finger parts or the Bb fingering parts? Also some notes say N/a what would I do in that case? Use the fingering for the horn it does show? and will it be the right note?
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