I would think that a bell that rings longer would be preferable because so  
many factors affect the resonance. I hate wearing a coat when I play 
because  even if I roll up the sleeve a bit and hold the horn off my leg I 
still 
feel  like the sound is deadened. Also, the person sitting next to me and the 
person  behind me is wearing a coat and acting as a sponge .I even ask the  
person sitting to my right at a rehearsal not to drape their jacket on the  
back of their chair. I think that if a bell has a little more life it  
produces a little clearer sound and projects better. I may be wrong or mentally 
 
ill and I humbly accept that fact.
Wes Hatch
_www.weshatchhorns.com_ (http://www.weshatchhorns.com)  
 
 
In a message dated 4/19/2011 12:19:10 P.M. Central Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

Howard  wrote: "I don't want to cut the bell on my N series 8D because the
bell  rings
forever. I suspect cutting it would destroy that. I remember one  day
up in Boonsboro Walter Lawson was telling me how their bells  ring
better than others. He whacked my N series 8D's bell with his  finger,
and it probably still hasn't quit ringing. He was visibly shaken,  and
immediately stopped telling me about that aspect of his  bells'
superiority!"

I have always had enormous respect for Walter  and his work, but this is one
thing I could never understand.  What  does a ringing bell flare mean?  What
does the old "thunk test"  prove?  You could whack a steel mixing bowl and 
it
work ring for a  week.  But would that bowl make a good horn bell?  And, all
other  things being relatively equal, what would it tell you about a flare
that  rung and rung versus one that seemed dead when you whacked it?   You
don't whack a horn to get the sound out.  You vibrate the air  column.  If a
bell just kept ringing and ringing, would that not  actually interfere with
attacks, or with notes speaking, when playing  runs?  And if not, why not?

I'm sure that a certain amount of  "ringing" is probably good for a bell
flare to have, but isn't possible to  have too much of a good thing?  I 
still
haven't puzzled this out, and  I sure would appreciate some enlightenment.
No one I've talked with about  this can give me a satisfactory explanation,
and I'd love to have  one.

-- 
*Regards,

Dave Weiner
Brass Arts  Unlimited*
_______________________________________________
post:  [email protected]
unsubscribe or set options at  
https://pegasus.memphis.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/options/horn/weshatch%40aol.com

_______________________________________________
post: [email protected]
unsubscribe or set options at 
https://pegasus.memphis.edu/cgi-bin/mailman/options/horn/archive%40jab.org

Reply via email to