Many years ago, never mind how many exactly I grew to really dislike a wide
range of music arranged for band.  Our group just wrapped up a pops concert
with a good number of marches in it.  I was able to find some great pleasure
in playing the horn parts that presented minimal challenge but did offer the
opportunity to listen to the other horns and how my part fit into the
chords.    

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Erica Brewster
Sent: Sunday, January 31, 2010 6:49 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Hornlist] reassurance, band boredom, and a question, etc.

I've been following this thread with interest, and a lot of good advice has
been shared. But just now have time to share a bit of my own experience.

I *was* that high school horn player from rural America, bored to tears,
writing to the hornlist (defunct version) and receiving support, 15 years
ago. (I was also roundly intimidated by Prof. Hans Pizka then, even before
there was YouTube to see him playing in person. I'm glad to see Prof. Pizka
is still sharing his wisdom with enthusiasm, despite his well-earned
retirement.)

Now look at me, all growed up. Scary how that happens.

I was fortunate enough to have sympathetic band directors, but unfortunate
that the weren't the type to re-arrange typical class C band lit to liven up
the many footballs and sax-doubling parts. What they did do, however, was
make sure that I had every opportunity to play in honors bands, be involved
in a variety of ensembles for competitions, and introduce me to the local
community band (which, while it may not have done much for increased
difficulty in music, did do a lot for my social skills and understanding the
dynamics of real-world music).

I also drove four hours, round trip, to take horn lessons one week night per
week. Thank you, Mom and Dad for trusting me to be out on the lonely roads
in the days before cell phones.

Then I went to college, and I suddenly realized I wasn't the best player on
the block by a long shot. Wow. Perhaps that was a result of my poor large
ensemble experience in high school, perhaps because of a lower natural
aptitude. I guess I'll never know. The one thing I am sure I was most hurt
by was that lack of opportunity to play exposed solos in an ensemble, and
the confidence this builds. Still, I learned much and loved every minute of
it.

In college I performed with an amazing concert band, and we played great
literature with wonderfully written parts *just for the horns* - the best
stuff had full section writing, with appropriate basement horn parts for the
fourth chair.
In the end, my career took me to live in remote locations overseas, in
places not conducive to horn playing. But now I am back playing in a variety
of ensembles with a variety of skill levels.

Here we don't have enough horns (or other instrumentation, or skill) to play
many of the things we did in college, so along the lines of the comments
made by Steven Mumford and Spike Maiden Muller, I'd like to get more
opinions of what is out there in band literature that a low and mid-level
community band could play that has good horn stuff. 

ARE there any composers out there that do write "good" stuff? I'm looking
for all-around solid arrangements, not just good horn lines. What types of
pieces might a high schooler or a community band member suggest to a
director that would keep us all interested?

Thanks for your advice, and glad to see hornists still gathering online!


Erica
Nowhere, northern Wisconsin
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