At 6:55 PM -0800 2/5/10, Ryan Beard wrote:
I'm thinking it is supposed to be herdenglocke -- cowbell.
A Practical Guide to Percussion Terminology by Russ Girsberger
agrees. You seem to have a misspelling.
John
--
John R. Howell, Assoc. Prof. of Music
Virginia Tech Department of Music
Hi all,
Working on a score where one of the percussion instruments called for is
hardenglocke. Since this word returns zero results in a Google search, I
assume the composer meant something else. Bells of some kind, presumably,
but... ?
Cheers,
- DJA
-
WEB:
Glocke is German for bell, but the harden- part very much suggest a misreading
at some level.
Klaus
--- On Sat, 2/6/10, Darcy James Argue djar...@earthlink.net wrote:
From: Darcy James Argue djar...@earthlink.net
Subject: [Finale] hardenglocke
To: finale@shsu.edu
Date: Saturday, February
...@earthlink.net wrote:
From: Darcy James Argue djar...@earthlink.net
Subject: [Finale] hardenglocke
To: finale@shsu.edu
Date: Saturday, February 6, 2010, 2:19 AM
Hi all,
Working on a score where one of the percussion instruments
called for is hardenglocke. Since this word returns zero
results
wrote:
Glocke is German for bell, but the harden- part very much suggest a
misreading at some level.
Klaus
--- On Sat, 2/6/10, Darcy James Argue djar...@earthlink.net wrote:
From: Darcy James Argue djar...@earthlink.net
Subject: [Finale] hardenglocke
To: finale@shsu.edu
Date: Saturday