From davidfetter at comcast.net Mon Mar 2 19:06:57 2020 From: davidfetter at comcast.net (DAVID FETTER) Date: Mon, 2 Mar 2020 20:06:57 -0500 (EST) Subject: [Trombone-l] Fetter Elysian Suite at American Trombone Workshop Message-ID: <153949098.449196.1583197617335@connect.xfinity.com> David Fetter?s Elysian Suite will be performed by the Elysian Trombone Consort at the American Trombone Workshop this Friday, March 6 at 9:30 a.m. (That?s right ? in the a.m.) The event is hosted by the U.S. Army Band at Fort Myer in Arlington, Virginia, in the Washington DC area. Fetter composed the Elysian Suite for the quartet, who premiered it in 2012 at the University of Southern California and repeated it at the 2013 International Trombone Festival in Columbus, Georgia. The ITF performance is found on YouTube, where the work?s four movements are each posted separately. Search for David Fetter: Elysian Suite. Peabody alumnus Nate Siler is a member of the quartet. For the American Trombone Workshop complete schedule see https://www.usarmyband.com/trombone/atw-schedule.html. https://www.usarmyband.com/trombone/atw-schedule.html. For other information see https://www.usarmyband.com/trombone/guest-artists.html. https://www.usarmyband.com/trombone/guest-artists.html. Scroll down for the registration button. The event is free, but registration is required. If past practice continues, there will be a live stream and archiving of the festival on YouTube. David Fetter fetterbrass.com From horton.raymond at gmail.com Mon Mar 2 19:43:27 2020 From: horton.raymond at gmail.com (Raymond Horton) Date: Mon, 2 Mar 2020 20:43:27 -0500 Subject: [Trombone-l] Fetter Elysian Suite at American Trombone Workshop In-Reply-To: <153949098.449196.1583197617335@connect.xfinity.com> References: <153949098.449196.1583197617335@connect.xfinity.com> Message-ID: Excellent quartet! They have performed a couple of pieces of mine! Raymond Horton Composer/Arranger Minister of Music, Edwardsville (IN) United Methodist Church Retired Bass Trombonist, Louisville Orchestra, 1970-2016 > On Mar 2, 2020, at 8:07 PM, DAVID FETTER via Trombone-l wrote: > > ?David Fetter?s Elysian Suite will be performed by the Elysian Trombone Consort at the American Trombone Workshop this Friday, March 6 at 9:30 a.m. (That?s right ? in the a.m.) The event is hosted by the U.S. Army Band at Fort Myer in Arlington, Virginia, in the Washington DC area. > > Fetter composed the Elysian Suite for the quartet, who premiered it in 2012 at the University of Southern California and repeated it at the 2013 International Trombone Festival in Columbus, Georgia. The ITF performance is found on YouTube, where the work?s four movements are each posted separately. Search for David Fetter: Elysian Suite. Peabody alumnus Nate Siler is a member of the quartet. > > For the American Trombone Workshop complete schedule see > > https://www.usarmyband.com/trombone/atw-schedule.html. https://www.usarmyband.com/trombone/atw-schedule.html. > > For other information see > > https://www.usarmyband.com/trombone/guest-artists.html. https://www.usarmyband.com/trombone/guest-artists.html. > > Scroll down for the registration button. The event is free, but registration is required. If past practice continues, there will be a live stream and archiving of the festival on YouTube. > > David Fetter > fetterbrass.com > _______________________________________________ > Trombone-l mailing list > Trombone-l at trombonelist.org > http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org From craig at parmerlee.com Tue Mar 3 08:35:51 2020 From: craig at parmerlee.com (Craig Parmerlee) Date: Tue, 3 Mar 2020 09:35:51 -0500 Subject: [Trombone-l] FS: Very nice Shires 485/495 tenor Message-ID: <844ab232-ff0f-4368-4a81-41acf412db33@parmerlee.com> I am selling a very nice small bore (2B equivalent) Shires on eBay: https://www.ebay.com/itm/164106110712 This instrument was donated to a charitable group,? It was one-owner, purchased from the factory about 2008.? Comes with two tuning slides (yellow and red brass).? The yellow brass tuning slide makes it a little edgy, which could work for ska or afro-cuban.? The red brass tuning slide makes it very well-mannered.? The horn has great clarity, and you can drive it surprisingly hard without it breaking up.? If seems to play a lot bigger than it is. I recorded a sound sample side by side with a factory 3B for reference. https://od.lk/f/MzlfMjExMTY1OTlf -- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus From horton.raymond at gmail.com Thu Mar 19 21:46:54 2020 From: horton.raymond at gmail.com (Raymond Horton) Date: Thu, 19 Mar 2020 22:46:54 -0400 Subject: [Trombone-l] crazy high bone solo Message-ID: at 40 seconds in.. Can anybody attach a name? Loose Caboose - Henry Mancini https://youtu.be/a2o_BNveKz0 Raymond Horton Composer, Arranger Minister of Music, Edwardsville (IN) United Methodist Church Retired Bass Trombonist, Louisville Orchestra, 1971-2016 Visit us at rayhortonmusic.com From studer_je at hotmail.com Thu Mar 19 21:59:19 2020 From: studer_je at hotmail.com (Jon Studer) Date: Fri, 20 Mar 2020 02:59:19 +0000 Subject: [Trombone-l] crazy high bone solo In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Down in the comments section of the video, someone says it?s Dick Nash. On Mar 19, 2020, at 19:48, Raymond Horton via Trombone-l wrote: ?at 40 seconds in.. Can anybody attach a name? Loose Caboose - Henry Mancini https://youtu.be/a2o_BNveKz0 Raymond Horton Composer, Arranger Minister of Music, Edwardsville (IN) United Methodist Church Retired Bass Trombonist, Louisville Orchestra, 1971-2016 Visit us at rayhortonmusic.com _______________________________________________ Trombone-l mailing list Trombone-l at trombonelist.org http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org From dseifried at wittenberg.edu Thu Mar 19 22:26:32 2020 From: dseifried at wittenberg.edu (Denver D. Seifried) Date: Fri, 20 Mar 2020 03:26:32 +0000 Subject: [Trombone-l] crazy high bone solo In-Reply-To: References: , Message-ID: I did happen to find a list of the trombone section for Breakfast At Tiffany's. The section was: Dick Nash Jimmy Priddy George Roberts John Halliburton Karl de Karske Denny Seifried Adjunct Trombone Instructor Wittenberg Univ. Dept. of Music ________________________________ From: Trombone-l on behalf of Jon Studer via Trombone-l Sent: Thursday, March 19, 2020 10:59 PM To: List Trombone Subject: Re: [Trombone-l] crazy high bone solo Down in the comments section of the video, someone says it?s Dick Nash. On Mar 19, 2020, at 19:48, Raymond Horton via Trombone-l wrote: ?at 40 seconds in.. Can anybody attach a name? Loose Caboose - Henry Mancini https://youtu.be/a2o_BNveKz0 Raymond Horton Composer, Arranger Minister of Music, Edwardsville (IN) United Methodist Church Retired Bass Trombonist, Louisville Orchestra, 1971-2016 Visit us at rayhortonmusic.com _______________________________________________ Trombone-l mailing list Trombone-l at trombonelist.org http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org _______________________________________________ Trombone-l mailing list Trombone-l at trombonelist.org http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org From demko61 at gmail.com Fri Mar 20 00:04:29 2020 From: demko61 at gmail.com (Dave Demko) Date: Fri, 20 Mar 2020 01:04:29 -0400 Subject: [Trombone-l] crazy high bone solo In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Great playing. I like the chart, too. As well as those just-right bass trombone licks. On Thu, Mar 19, 2020 at 10:48 PM Raymond Horton via Trombone-l < trombone-l at trombonelist.org> wrote: > at 40 seconds in.. Can anybody attach a name? > > Loose Caboose - Henry Mancini > > https://youtu.be/a2o_BNveKz0 > > Raymond Horton > Composer, Arranger > Minister of Music, Edwardsville (IN) United Methodist Church > Retired Bass Trombonist, Louisville Orchestra, 1971-2016 > Visit us at rayhortonmusic.com > _______________________________________________ > Trombone-l mailing list > Trombone-l at trombonelist.org > http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org > From bobkoester at msn.com Fri Mar 20 06:43:38 2020 From: bobkoester at msn.com (Bob Koester) Date: Fri, 20 Mar 2020 11:43:38 +0000 Subject: [Trombone-l] crazy high bone solo In-Reply-To: References: , Message-ID: I'd say most likely Dick Nash given the age and the source. Bass trombone probably George Roberts but maybe Kenny Shroyer. Bob Koester, Principal, MSI Financial Notice: This e-mail message and any attachment to this email message contain confidential information that my be legally privileged. If you are not the intended recipient, you must not review, retransmit, convert to hard copy, copy, use or disseminate this email or any attachments to it. If you have received this email in error, please immediately notify us by return email or by telephone at 913-341-7108 and delete this message. You may also notify us by surface mail to MSI Financial, 3965 West 83rd St. #114, Prairie Village, KS 66208. Forwarded messages, replies to prior messages, or all of this message or attachments may not have originated at this email address. This notice is automatically appended to all emails leaving this email address. ________________________________ From: Trombone-l on behalf of Dave Demko via Trombone-l Sent: Friday, March 20, 2020 12:04 AM To: List Trombone Subject: Re: [Trombone-l] crazy high bone solo Great playing. I like the chart, too. As well as those just-right bass trombone licks. On Thu, Mar 19, 2020 at 10:48 PM Raymond Horton via Trombone-l < trombone-l at trombonelist.org> wrote: > at 40 seconds in.. Can anybody attach a name? > > Loose Caboose - Henry Mancini > > https://youtu.be/a2o_BNveKz0 > > Raymond Horton > Composer, Arranger > Minister of Music, Edwardsville (IN) United Methodist Church > Retired Bass Trombonist, Louisville Orchestra, 1971-2016 > Visit us at rayhortonmusic.com > _______________________________________________ > Trombone-l mailing list > Trombone-l at trombonelist.org > http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org > _______________________________________________ Trombone-l mailing list Trombone-l at trombonelist.org http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org From michaelsanders6 at q.com Fri Mar 20 07:30:48 2020 From: michaelsanders6 at q.com (Michael Sanders) Date: Fri, 20 Mar 2020 08:30:48 -0400 (EDT) Subject: [Trombone-l] Solo Message-ID: <676761023.73293793.1584707448289.JavaMail.zimbra@q.com> Fantastic! Would that I could play like that. From drbach6 at aol.com Fri Mar 20 10:13:59 2020 From: drbach6 at aol.com (Linda Landis) Date: Fri, 20 Mar 2020 11:13:59 -0400 Subject: [Trombone-l] crazy high bone solo In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <9B10167A-FDEA-49AE-A469-4897F7FB74E0@aol.com> Definitely Dick Nash -------------- next part -------------- Linda Landis, Lead Trombone Columbus Jazz Orchestra, Columbus Symphony, Private Teacher > On Mar 20, 2020, at 7:43 AM, Bob Koester via Trombone-l wrote: > > I'd say most likely Dick Nash given the age and the source. Bass trombone probably George Roberts but maybe Kenny Shroyer. > > Bob Koester, Principal, MSI Financial > > Notice: This e-mail message and any attachment to this email message contain confidential information that my be legally privileged. If you are not the intended recipient, you must not review, retransmit, convert to hard copy, copy, use or disseminate this email or any attachments to it. If you have received this email in error, please immediately notify us by return email or by telephone at 913-341-7108 and delete this message. You may also notify us by surface mail to MSI Financial, 3965 West 83rd St. #114, Prairie Village, KS 66208. Forwarded messages, replies to prior messages, or all of this message or attachments may not have originated at this email address. This notice is automatically appended to all emails leaving this email address. > > ________________________________ > From: Trombone-l on behalf of Dave Demko via Trombone-l > Sent: Friday, March 20, 2020 12:04 AM > To: List Trombone > Subject: Re: [Trombone-l] crazy high bone solo > > Great playing. I like the chart, too. As well as those just-right bass > trombone licks. > > On Thu, Mar 19, 2020 at 10:48 PM Raymond Horton via Trombone-l < > trombone-l at trombonelist.org> wrote: > >> at 40 seconds in.. Can anybody attach a name? >> >> Loose Caboose - Henry Mancini >> >> https://youtu.be/a2o_BNveKz0 >> >> Raymond Horton >> Composer, Arranger >> Minister of Music, Edwardsville (IN) United Methodist Church >> Retired Bass Trombonist, Louisville Orchestra, 1971-2016 >> Visit us at rayhortonmusic.com >> _______________________________________________ >> Trombone-l mailing list >> Trombone-l at trombonelist.org >> http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org >> > _______________________________________________ > Trombone-l mailing list > Trombone-l at trombonelist.org > http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org > _______________________________________________ > Trombone-l mailing list > Trombone-l at trombonelist.org > http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org From drbach6 at aol.com Fri Mar 20 10:13:59 2020 From: drbach6 at aol.com (Linda Landis) Date: Fri, 20 Mar 2020 11:13:59 -0400 Subject: [Trombone-l] crazy high bone solo In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <9B10167A-FDEA-49AE-A469-4897F7FB74E0@aol.com> Definitely Dick Nash -------------- next part -------------- Linda Landis, Lead Trombone Columbus Jazz Orchestra, Columbus Symphony, Private Teacher > On Mar 20, 2020, at 7:43 AM, Bob Koester via Trombone-l wrote: > > I'd say most likely Dick Nash given the age and the source. Bass trombone probably George Roberts but maybe Kenny Shroyer. > > Bob Koester, Principal, MSI Financial > > Notice: This e-mail message and any attachment to this email message contain confidential information that my be legally privileged. If you are not the intended recipient, you must not review, retransmit, convert to hard copy, copy, use or disseminate this email or any attachments to it. If you have received this email in error, please immediately notify us by return email or by telephone at 913-341-7108 and delete this message. You may also notify us by surface mail to MSI Financial, 3965 West 83rd St. #114, Prairie Village, KS 66208. Forwarded messages, replies to prior messages, or all of this message or attachments may not have originated at this email address. This notice is automatically appended to all emails leaving this email address. > > ________________________________ > From: Trombone-l on behalf of Dave Demko via Trombone-l > Sent: Friday, March 20, 2020 12:04 AM > To: List Trombone > Subject: Re: [Trombone-l] crazy high bone solo > > Great playing. I like the chart, too. As well as those just-right bass > trombone licks. > > On Thu, Mar 19, 2020 at 10:48 PM Raymond Horton via Trombone-l < > trombone-l at trombonelist.org> wrote: > >> at 40 seconds in.. Can anybody attach a name? >> >> Loose Caboose - Henry Mancini >> >> https://youtu.be/a2o_BNveKz0 >> >> Raymond Horton >> Composer, Arranger >> Minister of Music, Edwardsville (IN) United Methodist Church >> Retired Bass Trombonist, Louisville Orchestra, 1971-2016 >> Visit us at rayhortonmusic.com >> _______________________________________________ >> Trombone-l mailing list >> Trombone-l at trombonelist.org >> http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org >> > _______________________________________________ > Trombone-l mailing list > Trombone-l at trombonelist.org > http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org > _______________________________________________ > Trombone-l mailing list > Trombone-l at trombonelist.org > http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org From dseifried at wittenberg.edu Fri Mar 20 12:24:33 2020 From: dseifried at wittenberg.edu (Denver D. Seifried) Date: Fri, 20 Mar 2020 17:24:33 +0000 Subject: [Trombone-l] Trombone section used on Breakfast At Fiffany's recording session Message-ID: Dick Nash Jimmy Priddy John Halliburton George Roberts Karl De Karske Denny Seifried Adjunct Trombone Instructor Wittenberg Univ. Dept. of Music From studer_je at hotmail.com Fri Mar 20 20:18:13 2020 From: studer_je at hotmail.com (Jon Studer) Date: Sat, 21 Mar 2020 01:18:13 +0000 Subject: [Trombone-l] What is it? Soprano Trombone or Slide Trumpet? Message-ID: I recently acquired at JP Rath Bb soprano trombone from DFMusic Inc dot com. (Yes, it?s Chinese made, but I?m ok with that as my use is limited.) I bought this as a novelty, with no current intentions of playing it anywhere but home. Once life gets back to normal, I thought it might be funny to bring it to my jazz band practice, and when we start warming up together, I?ll pull it out instead of my bass and see what reactions I get. Now, to the subject of this email. As I search around the internet to learn more, I see some sites calling it a slide trumpet and others calling it a soprano trombone. Some call it a trumpet because it?s pitched the same as a trumpet. Others call it a trombone because of the slide. Some use both names together to improve their internet searchability. Curious what others think? Is it a slide trumpet or a soprano trombone. Any other commentary is appreciated. Thanks, Jon From m at plunge.com Fri Mar 20 20:36:38 2020 From: m at plunge.com (markmcgrain) Date: Fri, 20 Mar 2020 20:36:38 -0500 Subject: [Trombone-l] What is it? Soprano Trombone or Slide Trumpet? In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: As a life long, dedicated trombonist I insist on ?soprano trombone.? BTW, I have a soprano that Larry Minick made and have been considering putting it on the market if anyone?s interested. Private email me if so. ?Exhibit your passion.??Max Roach ?Love, Time, and Divination? - featuring Mark McGrain with Matt Lemmler, James Singleton, and JohnBoutt?. http://www.markmcgrain.com/music Video: On The Turning Away w/ John Boutt? https://youtu.be/pW9rXTqVu5g www.markmcgrain.com/music booking at markmcgrain.com www.plunge.com www.immersionrecords.com > On Mar 20, 2020, at 8:22 PM, Jon Studer via Trombone-l wrote: > > ?I recently acquired at JP Rath Bb soprano trombone from DFMusic Inc dot com. (Yes, it?s Chinese made, but I?m ok with that as my use is limited.) > > I bought this as a novelty, with no current intentions of playing it anywhere but home. Once life gets back to normal, I thought it might be funny to bring it to my jazz band practice, and when we start warming up together, I?ll pull it out instead of my bass and see what reactions I get. > > Now, to the subject of this email. As I search around the internet to learn more, I see some sites calling it a slide trumpet and others calling it a soprano trombone. Some call it a trumpet because it?s pitched the same as a trumpet. Others call it a trombone because of the slide. Some use both names together to improve their internet searchability. > > Curious what others think? Is it a slide trumpet or a soprano trombone. Any other commentary is appreciated. > > Thanks, > Jon > > _______________________________________________ > Trombone-l mailing list > Trombone-l at trombonelist.org > http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org From jscot at ucalgary.ca Fri Mar 20 20:42:01 2020 From: jscot at ucalgary.ca (James L Scott) Date: Sat, 21 Mar 2020 01:42:01 +0000 Subject: [Trombone-l] What is it? Soprano Trombone or Slide Trumpet? In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Essentially, Soprano Trombone and Slide Trumpet are the same thing. It's not the kind of instrument that has tons of options out there to cater to different uses, since there aren't very many uses. I have two (a Jupiter, and an old antique that takes a cornet shank mouthpiece). Fun things to fool around with, but the only ensembles that I've heard use them as a serious instrument are Moravian-style Trombone Choirs. Check out the recording of some of this music on Crystal Records (maybe on YouTube?) organized by former LA Philharmonic Bass Trombonist Jeff Reynolds. They make the various members of the trombone family blend and sound good, but the soprano playing still has a "trumpet" quality. Pretty much has to because of the register. The best recent uses of soprano trombone that I've heard is the film score transcriptions of Pittsburgh Trombonist Jim Nova, and a humorous video by the German Brass (including a Piccolo Trombone). Jim Scott ________________________________ From: Trombone-l on behalf of Jon Studer via Trombone-l Sent: Friday, March 20, 2020 7:18 PM To: List Trombone Subject: [Trombone-l] What is it? Soprano Trombone or Slide Trumpet? I recently acquired at JP Rath Bb soprano trombone from DFMusic Inc dot com. (Yes, it?s Chinese made, but I?m ok with that as my use is limited.) I bought this as a novelty, with no current intentions of playing it anywhere but home. Once life gets back to normal, I thought it might be funny to bring it to my jazz band practice, and when we start warming up together, I?ll pull it out instead of my bass and see what reactions I get. Now, to the subject of this email. As I search around the internet to learn more, I see some sites calling it a slide trumpet and others calling it a soprano trombone. Some call it a trumpet because it?s pitched the same as a trumpet. Others call it a trombone because of the slide. Some use both names together to improve their internet searchability. Curious what others think? Is it a slide trumpet or a soprano trombone. Any other commentary is appreciated. Thanks, Jon _______________________________________________ Trombone-l mailing list Trombone-l at trombonelist.org http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org From jscot at ucalgary.ca Fri Mar 20 20:59:23 2020 From: jscot at ucalgary.ca (James L Scott) Date: Sat, 21 Mar 2020 01:59:23 +0000 Subject: [Trombone-l] What is it? Soprano Trombone or Slide Trumpet? In-Reply-To: References: , Message-ID: Hi - I'm hijacking this thread to ask for some help concerning the Trombone Chat Group. I'm sure there are many others here that are on both sites. I upgraded my hard drive on my laptop, and my saved passwords were gone when I got my computer back. I can't get on to the Chat group, except as a guest, and when I requested a new password to get back on, I received a 300 character password (the site only allowed about the first 15 digits in the login, and wouldn't accept that as the changed password). I have not been able to get either a new password, or get into the admin. part of the site to contact someone to get an answer to how to proceed. If someone in the admin is on this site, can you contact me to help? Alternatively, perhaps someone else can contact them directly and ask them to send me a message to help resolve this. Jim Scott jscot at ucalgary.ca ________________________________ From: Trombone-l on behalf of James L Scott via Trombone-l Sent: Friday, March 20, 2020 7:42 PM To: List Trombone ; Jon Studer Subject: Re: [Trombone-l] What is it? Soprano Trombone or Slide Trumpet? Essentially, Soprano Trombone and Slide Trumpet are the same thing. It's not the kind of instrument that has tons of options out there to cater to different uses, since there aren't very many uses. I have two (a Jupiter, and an old antique that takes a cornet shank mouthpiece). Fun things to fool around with, but the only ensembles that I've heard use them as a serious instrument are Moravian-style Trombone Choirs. Check out the recording of some of this music on Crystal Records (maybe on YouTube?) organized by former LA Philharmonic Bass Trombonist Jeff Reynolds. They make the various members of the trombone family blend and sound good, but the soprano playing still has a "trumpet" quality. Pretty much has to because of the register. The best recent uses of soprano trombone that I've heard is the film score transcriptions of Pittsburgh Trombonist Jim Nova, and a humorous video by the German Brass (including a Piccolo Trombone). Jim Scott ________________________________ From: Trombone-l on behalf of Jon Studer via Trombone-l Sent: Friday, March 20, 2020 7:18 PM To: List Trombone Subject: [Trombone-l] What is it? Soprano Trombone or Slide Trumpet? I recently acquired at JP Rath Bb soprano trombone from DFMusic Inc dot com. (Yes, it?s Chinese made, but I?m ok with that as my use is limited.) I bought this as a novelty, with no current intentions of playing it anywhere but home. Once life gets back to normal, I thought it might be funny to bring it to my jazz band practice, and when we start warming up together, I?ll pull it out instead of my bass and see what reactions I get. Now, to the subject of this email. As I search around the internet to learn more, I see some sites calling it a slide trumpet and others calling it a soprano trombone. Some call it a trumpet because it?s pitched the same as a trumpet. Others call it a trombone because of the slide. Some use both names together to improve their internet searchability. Curious what others think? Is it a slide trumpet or a soprano trombone. Any other commentary is appreciated. Thanks, Jon _______________________________________________ Trombone-l mailing list Trombone-l at trombonelist.org http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org _______________________________________________ Trombone-l mailing list Trombone-l at trombonelist.org http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org From craig at parmerlee.com Sat Mar 21 08:47:00 2020 From: craig at parmerlee.com (Craig Parmerlee) Date: Sat, 21 Mar 2020 09:47:00 -0400 Subject: [Trombone-l] What is it? Soprano Trombone or Slide Trumpet? In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <8430e9b1-39aa-1fd8-26c4-c4f72ac3c6f7@parmerlee.com> If you are playing in a trombone ensemble, it is a soprano trombone. If you are playing in a trumpet ensemble, God help you. On 3/20/2020 9:18 PM, Jon Studer via Trombone-l wrote: > I recently acquired at JP Rath Bb soprano trombone from DFMusic Inc dot com. (Yes, it?s Chinese made, but I?m ok with that as my use is limited.) > > I bought this as a novelty, with no current intentions of playing it anywhere but home. Once life gets back to normal, I thought it might be funny to bring it to my jazz band practice, and when we start warming up together, I?ll pull it out instead of my bass and see what reactions I get. > > Now, to the subject of this email. As I search around the internet to learn more, I see some sites calling it a slide trumpet and others calling it a soprano trombone. Some call it a trumpet because it?s pitched the same as a trumpet. Others call it a trombone because of the slide. Some use both names together to improve their internet searchability. > > Curious what others think? Is it a slide trumpet or a soprano trombone. Any other commentary is appreciated. > > Thanks, > Jon > > _______________________________________________ > Trombone-l mailing list > Trombone-l at trombonelist.org > http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org -- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus From jpreston1 at cox.net Sat Mar 21 09:19:40 2020 From: jpreston1 at cox.net (Jim Preston) Date: Sat, 21 Mar 2020 07:19:40 -0700 Subject: [Trombone-l] What is it? Soprano Trombone or Slide Trumpet? In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <07ba96d1-bc87-6304-4e96-6c7334778ffd@cox.net> There is a slide trumpet that is different from what we know as a trombone. Here are links to videos of different types of slide trumpets. My personal preference is to refer to these types of instruments as slide trumpets, and the ones shaped like a trombone as soprano trombone. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GlFxCAdX6-o https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UZFDhFBFHck Jim Preston On 3/20/2020 6:18 PM, Jon Studer via Trombone-l wrote: > I recently acquired at JP Rath Bb soprano trombone from DFMusic Inc dot com. (Yes, it?s Chinese made, but I?m ok with that as my use is limited.) > > I bought this as a novelty, with no current intentions of playing it anywhere but home. Once life gets back to normal, I thought it might be funny to bring it to my jazz band practice, and when we start warming up together, I?ll pull it out instead of my bass and see what reactions I get. > > Now, to the subject of this email. As I search around the internet to learn more, I see some sites calling it a slide trumpet and others calling it a soprano trombone. Some call it a trumpet because it?s pitched the same as a trumpet. Others call it a trombone because of the slide. Some use both names together to improve their internet searchability. > > Curious what others think? Is it a slide trumpet or a soprano trombone. Any other commentary is appreciated. > > Thanks, > Jon > > _______________________________________________ > Trombone-l mailing list > Trombone-l at trombonelist.org > http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org > From Mikeherta123 at gmail.com Sat Mar 21 15:58:49 2020 From: Mikeherta123 at gmail.com (Michael L Sanders, Sr) Date: Sat, 21 Mar 2020 14:58:49 -0600 Subject: [Trombone-l] How about just calling it a high pitched trombone? Message-ID: <9D11A61C-5587-4E48-B2C4-FA6A3D8A9DA8@gmail.com> Sent from my iPhone From pcpettit at gmail.com Sat Mar 21 18:44:43 2020 From: pcpettit at gmail.com (Peter C Pettit) Date: Sat, 21 Mar 2020 19:44:43 -0400 Subject: [Trombone-l] How about just calling it a high pitched trombone? In-Reply-To: <9D11A61C-5587-4E48-B2C4-FA6A3D8A9DA8@gmail.com> References: <9D11A61C-5587-4E48-B2C4-FA6A3D8A9DA8@gmail.com> Message-ID: Call it anything - just don?t call it late for dinner! > On Mar 21, 2020, at 5:00 PM, Michael L Sanders, Sr via Trombone-l wrote: > > ? > > Sent from my iPhone > > _______________________________________________ > Trombone-l mailing list > Trombone-l at trombonelist.org > http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org From keyser at mit.edu Sat Mar 21 18:48:23 2020 From: keyser at mit.edu (Samuel Jay Keyser) Date: Sat, 21 Mar 2020 23:48:23 +0000 Subject: [Trombone-l] FRsy Anthony and ? In-Reply-To: References: <9D11A61C-5587-4E48-B2C4-FA6A3D8A9DA8@gmail.com> Message-ID: <85D61B38-0071-4B5E-BA86-276E649DC4F7@mit.edu> Does anyone on the list know the solo trombone player?s name who paired off with RayAnthony on the latter?s recordings of the late fifties and early sixties. He had a gorgeous tone and effortless range skips. Jay From gary.sloane at sbcglobal.net Sat Mar 21 19:45:28 2020 From: gary.sloane at sbcglobal.net (Gary Sloane) Date: Sun, 22 Mar 2020 00:45:28 +0000 (UTC) Subject: [Trombone-l] FRsy Anthony and ? In-Reply-To: <85D61B38-0071-4B5E-BA86-276E649DC4F7@mit.edu> References: <9D11A61C-5587-4E48-B2C4-FA6A3D8A9DA8@gmail.com> <85D61B38-0071-4B5E-BA86-276E649DC4F7@mit.edu> Message-ID: <626411620.20801.1584837928166@mail.yahoo.com> Dick Nash played on Jam Session at the Tower (1956). That would be my first guess, but YMMV. Gary On Saturday, March 21, 2020, 4:49:18 PM PDT, Samuel Jay Keyser via Trombone-l wrote: Does anyone on the list know the solo trombone player?s name who paired off with RayAnthony on the latter?s recordings of the late fifties and early sixties.? He had a gorgeous tone and effortless range skips. Jay _______________________________________________ Trombone-l mailing list Trombone-l at trombonelist.org http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org From michaelsanders6 at q.com Sun Mar 22 11:11:59 2020 From: michaelsanders6 at q.com (Michael Sanders) Date: Sun, 22 Mar 2020 12:11:59 -0400 (EDT) Subject: [Trombone-l] What is it? Soprano Trombone or Slide Trumpet? In-Reply-To: <8430e9b1-39aa-1fd8-26c4-c4f72ac3c6f7@parmerlee.com> References: <8430e9b1-39aa-1fd8-26c4-c4f72ac3c6f7@parmerlee.com> Message-ID: <1353129927.74840653.1584893519759.JavaMail.zimbra@q.com> Speaking of Chinese made trombones I rented one while we were in Germany. I was surprised at how well it played. It seemed to be pretty well built. I didn't go looking for a Chinese horn. That was what they gave me. It was good enough for practice. ----- Original Message ----- From: "trombone-l" trombonelist.org> To: "Jon Studer" , "trombone-l" trombonelist.org> Sent: Saturday, March 21, 2020 6:47:00 AM Subject: Re: [Trombone-l] What is it? Soprano Trombone or Slide Trumpet? If you are playing in a trombone ensemble, it is a soprano trombone. If you are playing in a trumpet ensemble, God help you. On 3/20/2020 9:18 PM, Jon Studer via Trombone-l wrote: > I recently acquired at JP Rath Bb soprano trombone from DFMusic Inc dot com. (Yes, it?s Chinese made, but I?m ok with that as my use is limited.) > > I bought this as a novelty, with no current intentions of playing it anywhere but home. Once life gets back to normal, I thought it might be funny to bring it to my jazz band practice, and when we start warming up together, I?ll pull it out instead of my bass and see what reactions I get. > > Now, to the subject of this email. As I search around the internet to learn more, I see some sites calling it a slide trumpet and others calling it a soprano trombone. Some call it a trumpet because it?s pitched the same as a trumpet. Others call it a trombone because of the slide. Some use both names together to improve their internet searchability. > > Curious what others think? Is it a slide trumpet or a soprano trombone. Any other commentary is appreciated. > > Thanks, > Jon > > _______________________________________________ > Trombone-l mailing list > Trombone-l at trombonelist.org > http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org -- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus _______________________________________________ Trombone-l mailing list Trombone-l at trombonelist.org http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org From rodherbert at yahoo.com Sun Mar 22 16:04:46 2020 From: rodherbert at yahoo.com (rod herbert) Date: Sun, 22 Mar 2020 21:04:46 +0000 (UTC) Subject: [Trombone-l] Trombone-l Digest, Vol 37, Issue 4 In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <1109201239.182711.1584911086844@mail.yahoo.com> Soprano trombone? Check out Steve Bernstein in New York Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone On Monday, March 23, 2020, 5:00 am, trombone-l-request at trombonelist.org wrote: Send Trombone-l mailing list submissions to ??? trombone-l at trombonelist.org To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit ??? http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org or, via email, send a message with subject or body 'help' to ??? trombone-l-request at trombonelist.org You can reach the person managing the list at ??? trombone-l-owner at trombonelist.org When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific than "Re: Contents of Trombone-l digest..." Today's Topics: ? 1. How about just calling it a high pitched trombone? ? ? ? (Michael L Sanders, Sr) ? 2. Re: How about just calling it a high pitched trombone? ? ? ? (Peter C Pettit) ? 3. FRsy Anthony and ? (Samuel Jay Keyser) ? 4. Re: FRsy Anthony and ? (Gary Sloane) ? 5. Re: What is it? Soprano Trombone or Slide Trumpet? ? ? ? (Michael Sanders) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Message: 1 Date: Sat, 21 Mar 2020 14:58:49 -0600 From: "Michael L Sanders, Sr" To: Trombone-l at trombonelist.org Subject: [Trombone-l] How about just calling it a high pitched ??? trombone? Message-ID: <9D11A61C-5587-4E48-B2C4-FA6A3D8A9DA8 at gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Sent from my iPhone ------------------------------ Message: 2 Date: Sat, 21 Mar 2020 19:44:43 -0400 From: Peter C Pettit To: "Michael L Sanders, Sr" Cc: trombone-l at trombonelist.org Subject: Re: [Trombone-l] How about just calling it a high pitched ??? trombone? Message-ID: Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Call it anything - just don?t call it late for dinner! > On Mar 21, 2020, at 5:00 PM, Michael L Sanders, Sr via Trombone-l wrote: > > ? > > Sent from my iPhone > > _______________________________________________ > Trombone-l mailing list > Trombone-l at trombonelist.org > http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org ------------------------------ Message: 3 Date: Sat, 21 Mar 2020 23:48:23 +0000 From: Samuel Jay Keyser To: "trombone-l at trombonelist.org" Subject: [Trombone-l] FRsy Anthony and ? Message-ID: <85D61B38-0071-4B5E-BA86-276E649DC4F7 at mit.edu> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8" Does anyone on the list know the solo trombone player?s name who paired off with RayAnthony on the latter?s recordings of the late fifties and early sixties.? He had a gorgeous tone and effortless range skips. Jay ------------------------------ Message: 4 Date: Sun, 22 Mar 2020 00:45:28 +0000 (UTC) From: Gary Sloane To: "trombone-l at trombonelist.org" , ??? Samuel Jay Keyser Subject: Re: [Trombone-l] FRsy Anthony and ? Message-ID: <626411620.20801.1584837928166 at mail.yahoo.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8 Dick Nash played on Jam Session at the Tower (1956). That would be my first guess, but YMMV. Gary ? On Saturday, March 21, 2020, 4:49:18 PM PDT, Samuel Jay Keyser via Trombone-l wrote:? Does anyone on the list know the solo trombone player?s name who paired off with RayAnthony on the latter?s recordings of the late fifties and early sixties.? He had a gorgeous tone and effortless range skips. Jay _______________________________________________ Trombone-l mailing list Trombone-l at trombonelist.org http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org ? ------------------------------ Message: 5 Date: Sun, 22 Mar 2020 12:11:59 -0400 (EDT) From: Michael Sanders To: craig , Trombone List ??? Cc: Jon Studer ,??? trombone-l ??? Subject: Re: [Trombone-l] What is it? Soprano Trombone or Slide ??? Trumpet? Message-ID: <1353129927.74840653.1584893519759.JavaMail.zimbra at q.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8 Speaking of Chinese made trombones I rented one while we were in Germany.? I was surprised at how well it played. It seemed to be pretty well built.? I didn't go looking for a Chinese horn.? That was what they gave me.? It was good enough for practice. ----- Original Message ----- From: "trombone-l" trombonelist.org> To: "Jon Studer" , "trombone-l" trombonelist.org> Sent: Saturday, March 21, 2020 6:47:00 AM Subject: Re: [Trombone-l] What is it? Soprano Trombone or Slide Trumpet? If you are playing in a trombone ensemble, it is a soprano trombone. If you are playing in a trumpet ensemble, God help you. On 3/20/2020 9:18 PM, Jon Studer via Trombone-l wrote: > I recently acquired at JP Rath Bb soprano trombone from DFMusic Inc dot com. (Yes, it?s Chinese made, but I?m ok with that as my use is limited.) > > I bought this as a novelty, with no current intentions of playing it anywhere but home. Once life gets back to normal, I thought it might be funny to bring it to my jazz band practice, and when we start warming up together, I?ll pull it out instead of my bass and see what reactions I get. > > Now, to the subject of this email. As I search around the internet to learn more, I see some sites calling it a slide trumpet and others calling it a soprano trombone. Some call it a trumpet because it?s pitched the same as a trumpet. Others call it a trombone because of the slide. Some use both names together to improve their internet searchability. > > Curious what others think? Is it a slide trumpet or a soprano trombone. Any other commentary is appreciated. > > Thanks, > Jon > > _______________________________________________ > Trombone-l mailing list > Trombone-l at trombonelist.org > http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org -- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus _______________________________________________ Trombone-l mailing list Trombone-l at trombonelist.org http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org ------------------------------ Subject: Digest Footer _______________________________________________ Trombone-l mailing list Trombone-l at trombonelist.org http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org ------------------------------ End of Trombone-l Digest, Vol 37, Issue 4 ***************************************** From horton.raymond at gmail.com Sun Mar 22 16:41:25 2020 From: horton.raymond at gmail.com (Raymond Horton) Date: Sun, 22 Mar 2020 17:41:25 -0400 Subject: [Trombone-l] What is it? Soprano Trombone or Slide Trumpet? In-Reply-To: <07ba96d1-bc87-6304-4e96-6c7334778ffd@cox.net> References: <07ba96d1-bc87-6304-4e96-6c7334778ffd@cox.net> Message-ID: Thanks for posting, Jim! I've read about both of those for years, never heard or saw! Raymond Horton Composer, Arranger Minister of Music, Edwardsville (IN) United Methodist Church Retired Bass Trombonist, Louisville Orchestra, 1971-2016 Visit us at rayhortonmusic.com On Sat, Mar 21, 2020 at 10:20 AM Jim Preston via Trombone-l < trombone-l at trombonelist.org> wrote: > There is a slide trumpet that is different from what we know as a > trombone. Here are links to videos of different types of slide trumpets. > My personal preference is to refer to these types of instruments as > slide trumpets, and the ones shaped like a trombone as soprano trombone. > > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GlFxCAdX6-o > > https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UZFDhFBFHck > > Jim Preston > > On 3/20/2020 6:18 PM, Jon Studer via Trombone-l wrote: > > I recently acquired at JP Rath Bb soprano trombone from DFMusic Inc dot > com. (Yes, it?s Chinese made, but I?m ok with that as my use is limited.) > > > > I bought this as a novelty, with no current intentions of playing it > anywhere but home. Once life gets back to normal, I thought it might be > funny to bring it to my jazz band practice, and when we start warming up > together, I?ll pull it out instead of my bass and see what reactions I get. > > > > Now, to the subject of this email. As I search around the internet to > learn more, I see some sites calling it a slide trumpet and others calling > it a soprano trombone. Some call it a trumpet because it?s pitched the same > as a trumpet. Others call it a trombone because of the slide. Some use both > names together to improve their internet searchability. > > > > Curious what others think? Is it a slide trumpet or a soprano trombone. > Any other commentary is appreciated. > > > > Thanks, > > Jon > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Trombone-l mailing list > > Trombone-l at trombonelist.org > > http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org > > > > _______________________________________________ > Trombone-l mailing list > Trombone-l at trombonelist.org > http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org > From jim at jimnova.com Mon Mar 23 10:24:44 2020 From: jim at jimnova.com (Jim Nova) Date: Mon, 23 Mar 2020 11:24:44 -0400 Subject: [Trombone-l] In Memoriam: A Chorale After Bruckner overdub Message-ID: In Memoriam: A Chorale After Bruckner by Brian Pappal for trombone trio written in memory of his teacher and friend, Murray Crewe. I first encountered this piece the summer of 2018 when I was a guest faculty member at the Third Coast Trombone retreat. It won the trio competition and was premiered that summer by me and my friends Sebastian Vera and Nick Schwartz. Murray was larger than life in every way. He was my dear friend and PSO colleague for many years. I?ve always loved and championed this piece having played it at numerous times since the premiere at the ITF, Southeast Trombone Symposium and the Korea Trombone Symposium to name a few. As my first overdub since the Covid-19 crisis has broken, I hope this performance offers all some beauty and peace. ABOUT IN MEMORIAM from the composer: In Memoriam: A Chorale After Bruckner was composed in memory of Murray Crewe, former Bass Trombonist with the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra. Murray was my private trombone teacher at Duquesne University where he maintained a large studio of private trombone students and directed the trombone choir. During my lessons with him and in trombone choir rehearsals, Murray was contagiously positive and encouraging with a sense of humor all his own. He was also an artist of immense depth and sensitivity who daily sought to create and encounter moments of beauty in the world. Some of my greatest musical memories of Murray are of his leading the trombone choir in playing transcriptions of Bruckner?s choral motets. There are obvious parallels between the voice and the trombone, and Murray?s artistry combined with Bruckner?s profound compositions created a deeply moving experience for me as a young musician. I wrote this piece with those memories in my mind. The sonorities are intentionally vocal, and performance of the piece should be approached in a similarly sustained and expressive style. The first trombone part remains rather high without rest; it may be played by either a tenor or alto trombone depending on player preference. YouTube video: https://youtu.be/wOZZRE94uaU Soundcloud Link: https://soundcloud.com/jimnova/in-memoriam-a-chorale-after-bruckner James Nova Trombone - Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra Brass Area Coordinator and Adjunct Trombone Faculty - Duquesne University Brass Coach - Three Rivers Young Peoples Orchestras jimnova.com From demko61 at gmail.com Mon Mar 23 17:55:22 2020 From: demko61 at gmail.com (Dave Demko) Date: Mon, 23 Mar 2020 18:55:22 -0400 Subject: [Trombone-l] In Memoriam: A Chorale After Bruckner overdub In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: Jim, Thank you for sharing that beautiful and appropriate tribute. Dave D. On Mon, Mar 23, 2020 at 11:25 AM Jim Nova via Trombone-l < trombone-l at trombonelist.org> wrote: > In Memoriam: A Chorale After Bruckner by Brian Pappal for trombone trio > written in memory of his teacher and friend, Murray Crewe. > > I first encountered this piece the summer of 2018 when I was a guest > faculty member at the Third Coast Trombone retreat. It won the trio > competition and was premiered that summer by me and my friends Sebastian > Vera and Nick Schwartz. > > Murray was larger than life in every way. He was my dear friend and PSO > colleague for many years. I?ve always loved and championed this piece > having played it at numerous times since the premiere at the ITF, Southeast > Trombone Symposium and the Korea Trombone Symposium to name a few. As my > first overdub since the Covid-19 crisis has broken, I hope this performance > offers all some beauty and peace. > > ABOUT IN MEMORIAM from the composer: > In Memoriam: A Chorale After Bruckner was composed in memory of Murray > Crewe, former Bass Trombonist with the Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra. > Murray was my private trombone teacher at Duquesne University where he > maintained a large studio of private trombone students and directed the > trombone choir. During my lessons with him and in trombone choir > rehearsals, Murray was contagiously positive and encouraging with a sense > of humor all his own. He was also an artist of immense depth and > sensitivity who daily sought to create and encounter moments of beauty in > the world. Some of my greatest musical memories of Murray are of his > leading the trombone choir in playing transcriptions of Bruckner?s choral > motets. There are obvious parallels between the voice and the trombone, and > Murray?s artistry combined with Bruckner?s profound compositions created a > deeply moving experience for me as a young musician. I wrote this piece > with those memories in my mind. The sonorities are intentionally vocal, and > performance of the piece should be approached in a similarly sustained and > expressive style. The first trombone part remains rather high without rest; > it may be played by either a tenor or alto trombone depending on player > preference. > > YouTube video: > https://youtu.be/wOZZRE94uaU > > Soundcloud Link: > https://soundcloud.com/jimnova/in-memoriam-a-chorale-after-bruckner < > https://soundcloud.com/jimnova/in-memoriam-a-chorale-after-bruckner> > > > James Nova > Trombone - Pittsburgh Symphony Orchestra > Brass Area Coordinator and Adjunct Trombone Faculty - Duquesne University > Brass Coach - Three Rivers Young Peoples Orchestras > jimnova.com > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Trombone-l mailing list > Trombone-l at trombonelist.org > http://trombonelist.org/mailman/listinfo/trombone-l_trombonelist.org >