Exactly!
BTW the result is 'similar' to C tenor clef but in Bb Treble the key sig
must be adjusted by a tone to read as Ten clef- Then all C, F, and G
accidentals altered! 
Complex to explain- not too hard to do!

Cheers 
K in OZ 

Keith Helgesen.
Director of Music, Canberra City Band.
Ph: (02) 62910787. Mob 0417-042171

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
dhbailey
Sent: Tuesday, 20 June 2006 7:21 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Finale] trombones

Steve Currington wrote:
> Carl Dershem wrote:
> 
> 
>> .....-....-....-.....-.....-...
>> If you're trying to he authentic, do what he did.  He probably had a
> reason.
>> If you're trying to be played right the first time, bass clef is the 
>> first clef for trombonists, and the one they read without a seond 
>> thought (with fewer mistakes).
> 
> 
> Of course that assumes you are not a British Brass Band player where the
> non bass troms always only read treble cleft and almost never Bass Cleft
> 

And aren't the British Brass Band trombones not only in the treble clef 
but also transposed to Bb like Baritone T.C. in U.S. band music?


-- 
David H. Bailey
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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