Thank you very much for your answer. Your student must go forward very
fast "to fight for my job" as I will retire in five years. And my
birthday ? It is today, no joking. Your letter came as a nice
gratulation already. Thank you & PROSIT !

Greetings
Hans 
========================================================


-----Urspr�ngliche Nachricht-----
Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Im
Auftrag von Christopher Bonner
Gesendet: Montag, 17. M�rz 2003 01:20
An: The Horn List
Betreff: Re: [Hornlist] PENETRATING PROBLEMS ETC:

A big THANK YOU to Hans Pizka for his most recent posting.  Hans, you
had me
dancing around my apartment and clapping my hands together.

So many tend to forget that the horn is a "colour instrument"  and our
sound
is most often meant to enrich that which is going on around us.  As I
listen
to many student ensembles, it seems that a concept of "balance and
blend" is
not taught any longer. It saddens me to listen to an ensemble where it
seems
players are all striving to be heard above one another.  For much of
this I
blame the conductor for their lack of score study, and I DO NOT mean
knowing
who to cue on which beat of any given measure.  It is also the job of
the
players to spend time studying scores so that they know exactly how
their
parts fit into the whole piece. Do you know what note of a chord you are
playing, and who else is playing that note?  Can you blend you sound to
theirs so that you give birth to a new instrument that contains the
finest
qualities of both individual instruments?

A good "dark tone" has vibrancy and brilliance to it. Far too many
confuse
brilliance with brightness, this is why there are so many amateur groups
that are edgy and painful to listen to.  If you want a good tone, do
"long
tone" exercises, and do them everyday!  Do them in all registers and in
all
dynamic ranges.  There is nothing quite so close to heaven in the
musical
world as a perfect ensemble decrescendo.

Transposition seems to be a lost art amongst amateur players.  I am
eternally grateful to my conductors and horn teachers that forced me to
transpose from a young age.  I thought they were just being cruel when I
was
ten years old, now I understand. I teach many public school kids on a
weekly
basis, and only one of them truly understands. She was shocked by the
amount
of transposing that a professional hornist must do.  She took it upon
herself to go back through old method books, and start transposing
exercises
into five and sometimes six different keys.  I did not have to suggest
this,
she did it herself.  She already has the technical ability to play
Gliere's
great concerto. She is working hard to become the "complete" hornist.
Beware!!  In not too many years she is going to fighting you for YOUR
JOB!

Anyway, I have carried on long enough.  If I have offended anyone, my
most
sincere apologies.  I had to listen to far too many poor ensembles this
weekend, and I have had much "strong meat & beer" today.  Hans, let me
know
when your birthday is, so that I may uncork a fine vintage and drink to
your
continued health.

Christopher Bonner
Cape Coral, Florida.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Hans Pizka" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, March 16, 2003 5:39 PM
Subject: [Hornlist] PENETRATING PROBLEMS ETC:


Let us talk about the truth now. You have "penetrating" problems &
problems to be heard over the band or over the orchestra.

Have you really said such nonsense ? Really ?

Did you ever understand the function of the horn ? My answer is:
DEFINITELY NOT. The horns & the complete horn sections function is to be
FILLER, nothing else, like the violas in the symphony, nothing else. So
it is absolutely bad taste, if you try to be really HEARD, heard as a
separate voice. Well, there are few, very few pieces, where the section
might be on prominent voice, but few times. Mostly the horns just double
the trumpets one octave below, if the horns play melody eventually.

In the symphony it is still less. Don't come with argument as : but
Mahler. This is a foul argument. Even there, the horns have the filling
function. And it is just wise, to contribute to the whole thing, and not
in a race who is louder.

And the tutti (section) players are worse than any principal, as they
just fart as loud as they can to impress others "I can play louder than
the principal !". Punctum. So they ruin everything in the music. But
when it comes, that they have to hit a certain higher note with forte
dynamics or even fortissimo accent, there will come a weak mezzo forte
only, as soon as they have realized, that they will be playing ALONE.
Write solo above a long held middle range viola note, - and create
VIBRATO. Fits for many tutti horns too.

Remember, playing music is not to be heard as an individual player, but
to contribute to the enjoyment of audience & player. If you like to be
heard as solo, make yourself independent & play solo. The only solution.

The orchestra soli, if they shall be heard above the whole orchestra,
well, they are for the whole section mostly. So no problem, to be heard
well. If there is a real solo in the concert literature & you have
problems to be heard with your soft solo, call the conductor to keep the
accompaniment soft enough - it is a greater virtue to play soft than to
play loud -, AND play your part as soloist. Solo means, that even the
piano or the pianissimo must be altered, enriched with more substance
(comes from inside yourself, from your spirit), to carry. It is just a
different attitude, different approach.

And now the main problem:
Many of you seem to be spoiled by your first teachers, who had just
trumpeter training,, and even a very miserable training, not to talk
here about complete missing basics of musical education like singing,
transposing, recognizing chords, arpeggios, tonalities. But you go out &
play a Mahler symphony with your community orchestra, just because "it
is cool !"

Start again with some basic musical work, like reading different rhythm,
do it with a metronome, do long notes with a metronome first & later
without, start reading scores & following the different instruments.

The other problem I notice, is the switching between instruments. Just
extremely few individuals in the world might have the embouchure for
different, very different instruments. Remember very few. But do not
count YOU, to be one of these few. A trumpet embouchure or trombone
embouchure will RUIN any serious horn embouchure definitely. Any fine
tuning or fine playing will be ruined. All hard work (IF at ALL), will
be ruined.

And your tone problems: no wonder with these pinching tiny mouthpieces
or these great shit pots of mouthpieces for low horn. Did you ever think
about the difference between dark & really dark as a tone colour for low
horn. Not a fat fart, no, no. There is the black of the toner of a
computer printer. Ever seen ? Or the dark of an old worn out diesel
truck. But there is also the sparkling anthracite colour of crystal rock
coal. Guess, what dark colour I desire ?

And the bright colours ? Yes, the flash light of 10.000 Watt, the
penetrating blue lights. No, not these colours. But lava red, the blood
of the mountains, the burst of a Jupiter rocket, the emerald green laser
beam, the sharp sunlight in the forest, YES, this is bright & powerful.

Farkas preached the darker tone, yes, yes & yes again, but in contrast
to the super light & pinching tone around him in his days. But his
preaching is understood falsely.

And, why do so many (weak) player care so much about the extra tricks,
but the same time missing the simplest note, due to inadequate basic
knowledge. Isn�t that more or less nothing else than betraying yourself
? A deflection from your deficits ?

As I suppose, that many of you are very successful in their "non
musical" jobs, why do you open your mouth that wide, sometimes or even
too often ? Don't you notice, that birds are flying around, many birds.
And where birds fly, bird droppings will fall for sure !!!

For a good horn tone, you are invited, to visit my special pages about
the Viennese School of Horn Playing at
www.pizka.de/WrHrPlay1.htm & connected pages with many audio & video
clips. Look for the Dirge from the Britten Serenade or the Sinfonia
domestica.

Prof.Hans Pizka, Pf.1136
D-85541 Kirchheim - Germany
Fax: 49 89 903-9414 Phone: 903-9548
home: www.pizka.de
email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



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