En Rhythm

-- Mar. '88 | Filipino | SoCal | Brooklynite | Trumpeter | F Hornist | Drummer | Guitarist | Ravenclaw | Cyclist | Sartorialist | Foodie | Coffee Enthusiast. --
-- SoCal Dream Drum & Bugle Corps. Lead Mellophone '10, '11, '13. --

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Judge a person by their questions...
Posts tagged horn

Found another reason to love Ewan McGregor

He played F horn in High school band.

quinquangular:

collage from last month

made from a newspaper clipping my aunt sent me in the mail

I’m tempted to make a seperate blog just for things concerning Concert horn, mellophone, and middle horn stuff. it would be about technique, equipment and like. Should i do it?

fuckyeahhorn:

They really are the MOST adorable.

50 plays

The London Horn Sound (Duke Ellington) // Caravan

the Versitility of the Horn expointed by ensembles like this. I love it.

(Source: wolfstiel)

alysajolie:

lttlwrds:

sarahplayshorn:

Horn mind

GPOY. I was actually thinking about one of the flute players the other day~ :x

Love this! Gpoy :) *although I’m not into flute players… percussion on the other hand…*

haha “Till Eulenspiegel”, thought a featured clip would be “Siegfried’s call”

I like Eulenspiegel better anyway, let that bass range wide open.

(Source: sarahplayzhorn)

The sound of the horn, is the soul of the orchestra

Robert Schumann

this looks like a fun sextet.

this looks like a fun sextet.

(Source: sforzandos)

fuckyeahfrenchhorns:

I got the Piccolo Horn today. It’s like, the greatest thing ever. Time to play some Mozart. lol

Horn love for whom I think is Carolann.

I would very much enjoy a single descant horn.

I really want the Engelbert Schmid Single High F/Eb/E/D multi piccolo.

alysajolie:

My feet :) with my hip horn and song bird, and my French unicorn… and then my actual horn, Henri <3 (we make beautiful music together!!)

Horn and Ink love for Alysa

Anonymous asked: what is a good frenchy mouthpiece for someone with braces? i'm having a lot of problems finding one that is comfy

a great piece if you can find it is the old sanders piece. HUGE cushion rim with a big ID for space to move with braces protruding lips forward. The most commercially available equivalent is the Denis Wick 4. Their low horn piece has the same larger ID, and is fitted with a trumpet style rim for comfort. happy playing.

Anonymous asked: what French Horn mouthpiece do you use? I've been playing on the conn 7bw that came with my horn, but i'm not happy with it

My main piece is a Giardinelli Chambers cup in the #4 bore. It’s a company that used to be a standard for horn but no longer makes mpcs anymore.  the bore is huge most people play the #8. My other piece if i’m playing small ensemble/chamber/solo pieces is an old 80’s version of the holton farkas medium cup solid german silver makes a huge difference the new ones aren’t made this way. But I’m looking into switching to a Denis wick/Paxman 5. I don’t know what your ability or equipment is but i usually reccommend to my students the laskey 75G to 70G, depending on age and lip size. and an easier to find alternative is the schilke 30.

picked up my F Horn and just kept doing chromatics from middle C back and forth for half an hour…

by the time my lungs opened up all the way I got to 4 octaves…

from pedal D to High d”’

I’m kind of proud of myself

/rant

Essential solo and chamber music literature that all students of the horn should know, study, and own recordings of

  • Beethoven: Sonata, Op. 17
  • Brahms: Trio, Op. 40 for Horn, Violin, and Piano
  • Britten: Serenade, Op. 31 for Tenor, Horn, and Strings
  • Dukas: Villanelle
  • Haydn, J.: Concerto No. 1 in D; Concerto No. 2 in D
  • Hindemith: Sonata for Horn
  • Mozart: Concerto No. 1 in D, K. 412; Concerto No. 2 in E-flat, K. 417; Concerto No. 3 in E-flat, K 447; Concerto No. 4 in E-flat, K. 495; Concert Rondo; Quintet for horn and strings, K. 407
  • Schumann: Adagio and Allegro, Op. 70++; Konzertstuck for four horns and orchestra
  • Strauss, R.: Concerto No. 1, Op. 11; Concerto No. 2
  • Telemann: Concerto in D

via @John Ericson of the ASU school of horn, rights reserved.

I guess i need to buy a few more pieces for my practice library.

When the time to money payoff ratios shift for our society I will go back to University, I will bother to get my BA in Concert Horn performance. Hopefully i’ll have the money.

F horn tips and tricks

A few things I’ve picked up over my years of playing horn.

BTW: old photo

Fake High C: On some horns a high C can pop out while pressing the first valve of the F side down halfway. This is not recommended for performance as the tone quality of this note suffers. A way to try it is to play a normal third space c on the f side and slowly press down the first valve. Usefull for effect.

Fake High D:Pull out completely the first tuning slide of the F-horn. Playing this combination (T1) produces a stable, well centered tone, which blends quite well in the context of baroque music (e.g J.S.Bach kantata nr.100 in G). This is of course not the case with symphonic, post-romantic parts, or with contemporary music.

Double horn transitions: transitioning from each side of the horn should be undetectable and the point on transition is not set in stone( i.e. not always Ab). The notes middle Ab up to second line C have identical fingerings and should be in tune, and have identical timbre on both sides. It is advisable to use the Bb side down to Ab and then switch when descending as is common custom, but use the F side up thru 2nd line C when ascending before switching to Bb. This switch point masks the change valve more effectively making the tone sound more uniform in moving lines. 

Fundamental pedal CC: if you have a double horn and cannot achieve the pedal C (2 ledgers below bass clef)  on the F side of the horn, it may be played T13. The tone quality will sound closer to that of a Baritone horn, but you will have achieved the note.

Reading a trombone/baritone part in bass clef: read the notes as if in tenor clef and adjust the key signature accordingly. Pay attention to play notes Low F and lower, with the Bb side as much as possible. The tone quality will be uncharacteristic of the Horn and closer to that of the baritone, and have more stable entrances.

Wind/dragon breath effect: You can emulate wind or dragons breath as a sound effect on horn. Take out the mouthpiece and place it back wards in your mouth, hold the mouthpiece so that the mouthpiece receiver on the horn floats about halfway into the mouthpiece cup. Blow into the shank, this should give a nice wind or large animal breath effect useful in theatre.

Range: the horn can cover up to 4+ octaves and covering that range with one mouthpiece can give a strained and false sound in it’s lower and higher range. Parts are always written in paired high parts and low parts. Traditionally 1 + 3 are high, and 2 + 4 are low, with a 5th player (bumper) doubling the lead for loud sections in large ensembles. The parts can always be expected to cover 2.5 to 3 octaves each in either direction. Unless you specialise as a 4th horn, bring two mouthpieces. You will want your regular medium-ish mouthpiece, and most common is a separate low horn piece that is deeper with a bigger bore. This of course may be backwards if you play 1st, then you will be of the persuasion to use a single Bb or descant horn to facilitate the upper range and are use a shallower medium to small cup that will support that horn.This use of a separate horn with one mouthpice is common for leads instead of carrying a separate mouthpiece for the double horn, since they are asked to cover a tessitura in the higher range and usually no lower than about low Gb.

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