Hello friends. I hope you all are well as I write to you at an earlier time than normal, as I finally have some peace and quiet to concentrate with my Tomita CD of Debussy classics playing, creating an atmosphere perfect for (pro)creation.
This entry is a bit to let off a little steam from orchestra rehearsal this week, as I learn more and more not to trust the dynamic markings from the composer. We are currently working on Beethoven's Seventh symphony, as I have mentioned in previous entries in this blog. Beethoven is an interesting beast to try and tackle for the young trumpeter in a symphony. All dynamics are normally forte or fortissimo yet most of the time you shouldn't be heard above a whisper. Never mind, the first parts are normally fairly high. He lets you play out a little more than Mozart does but never really to where you feel comfortable or confident. So here's a chart I devised to translate Beethoven's dynamics to trumpet:
fortissimo - mezzo forte at most, you're part of the collective timbre, keep your bell in the stand, don't project
forte - mezzo piano, not important, you're keeping the time and place, keep your bell in the stand, don't project
mezzo forte - why bother playing, the conductor won't be able to tell if you are or not.
mezzo piano - ditto
piano or pianissimo - This means the part is soft over all and its probably more exposed than you wish and you're going to screw up this part. Also you're probably in unison with tympani, better pray they can count. Don't forget your horn is cold from sitting there for 600 bars while the strings saw their way through the development of the sonata. That section is in another key that the trumpets of the time couldn't play in. You are wishing for those days to come back.
On the other side of the spectrum, we are also working on Finlandia by Jean Sibelius. This we almost can't be too loud. My only fear is that I'm playing second, so I'm trying not to over step my stand my stand partner so she can learn to build up her volume and power. Shes got it, just needs to not be shy about it. So heres a chart for Finlandia:
fortissimo - as loud as you can be to blend with the trombone, looking for a pipe organ sound
forte - is the signature fanfare that repeats, tastefully in the front
mezzo forte - not existant
mezzo piano - n/a
piano - n/a
pianissimo - Only there once, so you can crescendo to fortissimo in 4 beats to fortissimo with the low brass.
Well as I sit here on the eve of AC/DC's new album and a quick jaunt to the beach by myself to get my wits together, I'm now listening, to Keane's new album. I'm a bit disappointed as I don't like the 80's pop sound their new producer gave to them, I liked their older more raw piano and drums sound. They have a fuller sound to them now. But don't get me wrong, I still like them and I like this album, and I'm glad Tom Chaplin seems to have gotten his life back together after his stint in rehab. The thing though is I have a feeling these guys are a little younger than me, so I am doubting they are old enough to have experienced 80's music when it happened, and I think that is where the rub is with this album. I'm not saying I am old enough either, since I was born in 1980, I was like 3 with Michael Jackson's Thriller, so I couldn't do an 80's sound either without it sounding more like a mocking. This album puts me in fear with the Killers new album considering they hired the same producer and will also have an 80s touch to it. Though the Killers did pretty well, I think, with the Springsteen inspired "Sam's Town".
Have a good weekend my pals, and I will catch you on the other side of my mini vacation.
Saturday, October 18, 2008
The ways of the young trumpet in the symphony
Labels:
AC/DC,
Beethoven,
Bruce Sprinsteen,
Finlandia,
Keane,
Sam's Town,
sibelius,
symphony,
The Killers,
trumpet
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