C Bass Trumpet Ring Cycle Part
- bassbone
- Posts: 173
- Joined: May 04, 2018
Hi All-
Denson Paul Pollard has a youtube video up where he goes through playing every note from the bass trumpet part of Rheingold. (<YOUTUBE id="Ss7YTGWEEfM" t="28">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ss7YTGWEEfM&t=28s)</YOUTUBE>
In this, he mentioned a C Bass Trumpet part written out by Roger Smith that he was using. In the video, it looks like the part is for the whole cycle, not just Rheingold. I have normal Eb/D parts, but does anyone have this Roger Smith part as a PDF they would be willing to share?
Denson Paul Pollard has a youtube video up where he goes through playing every note from the bass trumpet part of Rheingold. (<YOUTUBE id="Ss7YTGWEEfM" t="28">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ss7YTGWEEfM&t=28s)</YOUTUBE>
In this, he mentioned a C Bass Trumpet part written out by Roger Smith that he was using. In the video, it looks like the part is for the whole cycle, not just Rheingold. I have normal Eb/D parts, but does anyone have this Roger Smith part as a PDF they would be willing to share?
- Kdanielsen
- Posts: 609
- Joined: Jul 28, 2019
Ive always wanted this too
- bbocaner
- Posts: 315
- Joined: Mar 26, 2018
I've got one done by someone in Germany, but you'd have to buy it from them, the edition is copyright. I know David Miller of Sterling Music Publications has also done one, but his is in tenor clef which I think is a disadvantage.
- bassbone
- Posts: 173
- Joined: May 04, 2018
Do you have a link to where the German edition can be purchased if anyone is interested?
Certainly not wanting to break copyright laws. Just figured the handwritten version by Roger Smith done 50+years ago of a 150 year old opera would be public domain at this point.
Certainly not wanting to break copyright laws. Just figured the handwritten version by Roger Smith done 50+years ago of a 150 year old opera would be public domain at this point.
- CalgaryTbone
- Posts: 1460
- Joined: May 10, 2018
I picked up a complete "C" bass trumpet "Ring" part from someone in New Zealand who was selling it (I think) on the old Forum. It was done in Finale or Sibelius, and was sent as a PDF that you could print at home. It was a while ago, so I don't have any contact info, but some time on Google might lead you to the person who sells this.
The Roger Smith hand copied version was floating around NY when I was a student there. Except for the historical nature of that version, I wouldn't recommend it from the standpoint of the quality of the parts. I remember the part being legible, but not professionally copied, and anything out there is at least a 10th generation xerox. Better off to use a version done on a computer program.
Jim Scott
The Roger Smith hand copied version was floating around NY when I was a student there. Except for the historical nature of that version, I wouldn't recommend it from the standpoint of the quality of the parts. I remember the part being legible, but not professionally copied, and anything out there is at least a 10th generation xerox. Better off to use a version done on a computer program.
Jim Scott
- mbarbier
- Posts: 367
- Joined: May 17, 2018
https://imslp.org/wiki/Die_Walk%C3%BCre%2C_WWV_86B_(Wagner%2C_Richard)Unfortunately not the full Ring, but one of the C parts is on IMSLP in quite a nice scan. Looks like the rest are just good scans of the originals.
- bbocaner
- Posts: 315
- Joined: Mar 26, 2018
[quote="bassbone"]Do you have a link to where the German edition can be purchased if anyone is interested?
[/quote]
I have to find it in my music. Once I've got the name off it I should be able to figure out where it's for sale.
[/quote]
I have to find it in my music. Once I've got the name off it I should be able to figure out where it's for sale.
- bassbone
- Posts: 173
- Joined: May 04, 2018
[quote="CalgaryTbone"]
The Roger Smith hand copied version was floating around NY when I was a student there. Except for the historical nature of that version, I wouldn't recommend it from the standpoint of the quality of the parts. I remember the part being legible, but not professionally copied, and anything out there is at least a 10th generation xerox. Better off to use a version done on a computer program.
Jim Scott[/quote]
thanks. not interested in the historical aspect of the Roger Smith part, just prefer not to figure out Eb/D transpositions while also figuring out how to play bass trumpet :)
The Roger Smith hand copied version was floating around NY when I was a student there. Except for the historical nature of that version, I wouldn't recommend it from the standpoint of the quality of the parts. I remember the part being legible, but not professionally copied, and anything out there is at least a 10th generation xerox. Better off to use a version done on a computer program.
Jim Scott[/quote]
thanks. not interested in the historical aspect of the Roger Smith part, just prefer not to figure out Eb/D transpositions while also figuring out how to play bass trumpet :)
- sf105
- Posts: 433
- Joined: Mar 24, 2018
[quote="bassbone"]thanks. not interested in the historical aspect of the Roger Smith part, just prefer not to figure out Eb/D transpositions while also figuring out how to play bass trumpet :)[/quote]
It takes a little while, but there aren't really that many different things to play. It's much of the same material over and over (and over) again.
S
It takes a little while, but there aren't really that many different things to play. It's much of the same material over and over (and over) again.
S