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Dale Proctor Heavyweight Member
Joined: 26 May 2005 Posts: 9382 Location: Heart of Dixie
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Posted: Sun Jan 21, 2024 2:36 pm Post subject: |
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mm55 wrote: | ramado24@clarkston.k12.mi wrote: | west side story, I simply did not. Who the heck decided that a double sharp was necessary and not confusing? |
Correct spelling of accidentals is appropriate. It's only confusing until you learn to read music with all the possible accidentals, which is a very good thing to learn, and can avoid confusion. |
The audience doesn’t care how the accidentals are notated - they just want the piece played correctly. I see no reason for double sharps, double flats, and notes such as Cb and B# that make the music more “thought provoking” for the performer just because they are correct because of musical convention. _________________ "Brass bands are all very well in their place - outdoors and several miles away ." - Sir Thomas Beecham |
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mm55 Heavyweight Member
Joined: 01 Jul 2013 Posts: 1414
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Posted: Sun Jan 21, 2024 4:47 pm Post subject: |
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ramado24@clarkston.k12.mi wrote: | Who the heck decided that a double sharp was necessary ... |
Leonard Bernstein.
Quote: | ... and not confusing? |
Who the heck decided that double-sharps are confusing? And who the heck decided that a musician who is confused by an ordinary double-sharp should be playing West Side Story?
If it's confusing, someone needs more time in the shed. Double sharps are not weird, esoteric, or complicated. They are not confusing unless you choose to be confused rather than simply learning how to read music. Even less so, E-sharps and C-flats. They are all an essential core part of tonal music notation and theory. They indicate the tonal context of a note in a key or chord, rather than just representing each pitch in isolation. _________________ '75 Bach Strad 180ML/37
'79 King Silver Flair
'07 Flip Oakes Wild Thing
'42 Selmer US
'90 Yamaha YTR6450S(C)
'12 Eastman ETR-540S (D/Eb)
'10 Carol CPT-300LR pkt
'89 Yamaha YCR2330S crnt
'13 CarolBrass CFL-6200-GSS-BG flg
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Man Of Constant Sorrow Veteran Member
Joined: 25 Jun 2023 Posts: 487
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Posted: Sun Jan 21, 2024 4:49 pm Post subject: |
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Dale Proctor wrote: | mm55 wrote: | ramado24@clarkston.k12.mi wrote: | west side story, I simply did not. Who the heck decided that a double sharp was necessary and not confusing? |
Correct spelling of accidentals is appropriate. It's only confusing until you learn to read music with all the possible accidentals, which is a very good thing to learn, and can avoid confusion. |
The audience doesn’t care how the accidentals are notated - they just want the piece played correctly. I see no reason for double sharps, double flats, and notes such as Cb and B# that make the music more “thought provoking” for the performer just because they are correct because of musical convention. |
I agree.
Sometimes, I truly believe the composer's primary instrument is the didgeridoo ... and the arranger gets off on little "cutesy" crap. _________________ Sub-Optimal Hillbilly Jazz |
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tptLad Regular Member
Joined: 03 Jan 2024 Posts: 41
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Posted: Mon Jan 29, 2024 5:25 pm Post subject: |
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ltkije1966 wrote: | I never want to play LeRoy Anderson's Sleigh Ride again in my life! It's not horrible, it's just painful. |
Very surprised to see only one sleigh ride on here!
That's one I'd actually like to play at some point just to see how bad/painful it is. _________________ "Life is a lot like jazz… it's better when you improvise." - George Gershwin |
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Athos Heavyweight Member
Joined: 09 May 2004 Posts: 805 Location: St Louis
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Posted: Tue Jan 30, 2024 4:59 am Post subject: |
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Sometimes those things come our way, though it's rare. The best example I could think of was "The Barry White Experience" several years ago.
The music came in too late for the library to go through it properly. The string parts did not match the horn parts, and neither matched what the band was actually doing.
Aside from that, the band wasn't very good, and the lead singer shared little with Barry White aside from a very tangential physical resemblance.
People were demanding refunds by intermission.
And yes, I played it, because it was part of my job. |
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