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From: | D Josiah Boothby |
Subject: | Re: wrong transposition of horn |
Date: | Fri, 24 Sep 2004 22:00:03 -0700 (PDT) |
"Old notation" bass clef has a certain logical place in a context (such as Strauss's Don Quixote) in which a low horn is traversing a range which makes the use of treble or bass clefs awkward. Rather than learn three clefs (tenor clef would be a pretty close replacement for old notation bass clef), we hornists have to learn two clefs, but one of them twice. There is nothing inherently correct about old notation, and as for examples of "new" notation being used, I seem to recall that Stravinsky favored it. Most composers in the 20th century favored having a consistent transposition between clefs, but it is a good idea to indicate the composer's preference if there is any ambiguity. (In Beethoven, or similar, ambiguity is irrelevant as there were very few pitches playable in a low enough register to make any mistakes about which octave is intended). Besides, isn't it as simple as indicating somthing like \clef bass \transpose c c' { ... } to make something old notation? In any event, I doubt this belongs in the "bug" thread as it has more to do with composer/publisher/performer preferences as anything else. Josiah
------------------------------ Message: 4 Date: Fri, 24 Sep 2004 23:30:35 +0200 (CEST) From: Werner LEMBERG <address@hidden> Subject: Re: wrong transposition of horn To: address@hidden Cc: address@hidden Message-ID: <address@hidden> Content-Type: Text/Plain; charset=us-asciiThe purpose of using bass clef is making parts easier to read by eliminating ledger-lines. "Old notation" defeats the purpose. Sadly, this bad practice is even perpetuated by some notation handbooks who advocate it on the grounds of being "unambiguous". (thus spoke the typographically inclined hornplayer :-)Well, I've *never* seen a full score with horns in F (or other keys) which transposes down if in bass clef. It's always up a fourth. Do you have an example? BTW, there are other instruments also which need special transpositions. IIRC, a bass clarinet in B sounds a ninth lower if notated in treble clef, but it sounds only a second lower if notated in bass clef. Similar things happen for Wagner tuba. Werner
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