SlideShare a Scribd company logo
1 of 40
Download to read offline
The Concert At Uco Jass Lab
On Tuesday, November 4 2014, I attended a tuba concert at UCO Jass Lab. The concert was performed by Paul Nesper, Adjunct Instructor of Tuba
and Euphonium at UCO. He was accompanied by Samuel Magrill who assisted him on the piano. It was a heart touching performance, where Nesper
played various renowned pieces by Bach, Tcherepnin, Bartz, Grant and Ewazen.
The concert opened with Nesper playing Sonata No. 2 BWV 1028, the famous piece by Johann Sebastian Bach. This was one of Bach's most
phenomenal piece of work. Nesper was very successfully able to recreate the music and present it in a very impressive way using the tuba. He was
assisted by Magrill playing the piano as well. The mood was very soothing. The language of the music was very social and witty. Nesper played all
four forms of the Sonata, namely Adagio, Allegro, Andante and Allegro. These exhibit an olderconcerto form with four alternating movements: slow,
fast, slow, fast. It sounded to me like the slower ones were building up to and serving as introductions to the faster pieces. Both tuba and the piano went
hand in hand and together created a very soothing and relaxing music. The opening form Adagio revealed the significance of both tuba and piano. Both
instruments were used together as partners, creating an arioso–like melody, but also interlinking the melody parts together in such a way that each of
them are equally essential to the overall line. Both instruments are partnered again in the following Allegro,
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Personal Narrative-Marching Band
1. Thirty pounds of metal resting on my left shoulder, I marched for hours in the blistering hot sun. The sousaphone was my greatest enemy. In 6th
grade I was chosen to play tuba for our middle school band, I didn't like it at first, but it grew on me. Two years later, I had gotten pretty good. I made
all state band, won some awards, and was 1st chair. I had no intention in joining the marching band my freshman year. It was the first day of summer,
about 10 o' clock in the morning and my phone rang. It was a number I didn't recognize but I answered it anyway. "Hello Ms. Mullen are you coming
today?"
"Coming to what? Who is this?" "This is Mr. Sax, the High school band director. To marching band camp, we need you on tuba, I can have an... Show
more content on Helpwriting.net ...
I was picked up from my house and driven to the school. I walked into the band director's office and he was surprised by how little I was. He said,
"Wow. I don't know if your going to be strong enough to march tuba, maybe you can try baritone." I was appalled. Of course I'm strong enough to
march tuba. "No, I'm going to play tuba" I said. I vividly remember the first time I placed the sousaphone on my shoulder. At first it was okay. I felt
comfortable, like it would be a piece of cake, but let me tell you, there is a reason why most tuba players are big, tough 300 pound guys full of
muscle. Here I was a 89 pound 14 year old girl, with a big hunk of metal on my shoulder. It felt fine for a few minutes, but after ten minutes it was as
if my whole body was about to crumble into pieces while the band marched on. Although it was a large obstacle, I was determined to power through.
So for 7 days I learned the marching drill. I memorized the music. I played the notes. I tried not to pass out and die. By the end of camp I had
accumulated sunburn, a giant bruise on my left shoulder, and a sense of accomplishment. There truly is nothing better than doing something people say
you can't
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Cornu Instrument Analysis
The instrument I chose was the Cornu. The reason why I chose this one was because I thought it would be similar to the cornet, which is just a
smaller version of the trumpet, and I know how to play the trumpet. But, it is actually similar to a tuba; it's just very skinny and doesn't have any
keys. When I first heard it, I thought it sounded like a very bad french horn, but when it's played by someone who actually knows how to play it very
well it sounds like a brassy, harsh – but clear, horn sound. The cornu, which means "horn" in latin was used as a military instrument for the ancient
Romans. Two of the instruments were found in the late 19th century buried in pompeii next to a Roman soldier. The military used it as a way to direct
the movements
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sebastian Bach During The Baroque Period
On November 13, 2015 Dr. David Earll of the University of Wisconsin Platteville faculty performed a Tuba and Euphonium Recital. The program for
the recital included various 20th century works and their composers along with pieces from Antonio Capuzzi from the classical era and Sebastian
Bach during the Baroque Era, whom was discussed in class. Works that were played include: "T. Rex for Tuba andPiano" by Mark Schultz, "My
Mountain Top for Tuba and Tape" by Andy Scott, "Double
–Bass Concerto (adapted for Euphonium)" by Antonio Capuzzi, "Alarum" by Edward
Gregson, "Silhouette for Tuba and Piano" by John Harmon, and "Flute Sonata in Eb Major" by Johann Sebastian Bach. My favorite piece was "T.
Rex" by Mark Schultz. I believe that brass instruments
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Imagination as a Coping Mechanism in You Don’t Know Me...
The mind is a place for imagination and for thoughts. People use their thoughts and imagination in many ways to cope with problems. It is used as
a place to escape the troubles of the real world. In You Don't Know Me by David Klass, John copes with his abuse and his teenage life by creating
imaginary tribes to provide his alternate outcomes to situations, personifying objects and blaming them for his failures, and giving nicknames
describing a bad quality they have. John creates an imaginary tribe to provide alternate outcomes to his problems if he was actually part of this
tribe. He constantly states how he wishes he was in this tribe, because to him it would solve his problems. The tribe also has the same views has
him, for example they view childhood as an obstacle they must overcome, as does he. Just as John faces his abusive father, the tribe faces an
enemy tribe trying to kill them. "Now if I were a Lashasa Palulu, I would probably have kicked him [Stan] in the nose, because one advantage of
walking on your hands is that it leaves your feet free for combat, but since I was not born into that tribe that is not a tribe, all I could do was start to
cry, because the WHOP hurt so much" (Klass 16). John imagines that he could of beat up Stan and end his abuse if he was part of this tribe. He uses
this tribe to come up with an alternate outcome to which he is not abused and all of his troubles with Stan are over. This helps John cope with his
abuse. John personifies
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
NHS Merit Selection
I believe that I do merit selection for NHS. One of the main reasons that I believe that I should be selected for the National Honor Society is my
work outside of school hours. Outside of school I keep score for basketball and am very heavily involved at my church The House Mountain Grove.
Other things that I do outside of school include various community projects including the Cabool "Seniors Rock" 5k run three years ago. At school
events I represent Mansfield proudly, I have been first chair tuba in Summit Conference for a consecutive three years, and I made district band my
freshman year. Other than the band I have also represented Mansfield for FBLA on a district, and state level both of my years ofhigh school. My other
form of representing
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Why Is Music Important To Me?
Music can accomplish things. I learned this while working on composing something required to apply to a mentorship program, wherein theory and
composition professors at the University of Bennington provide feedback and advice on how to improve on composition. To apply, a chamber piece
was needed; this means a piece of music written for few instruments and with each instrument playing a separate part. I began with my daily process
of improvising a melody on the piano before expanding it by adding a counter–melody. Many people talk about how they feel a "flow state" when they
are focused on something that they love, and this is how I feel when writing and playing music. When I am in this state, I can see the connections
between different notes; I can hear what should come next; I can anticipate the pushing and pulling as dissonances resolve and then ... Show more
content on Helpwriting.net ...
Just like how music has no one way to arrange it, no one set of instruments to best bring it to life, many real life tasks have no one way to solve
them. And ultimately, the journey is truly more important than the destination. Imagine how boring the world would be were every problem and
question to be answered coldly and swiftly with the one best answer? Rather, the journey to discover a unique and possibly fun solution should be
taken. Indeed, it is these divergences from the best or most efficient solution which may not always be beneficial in the moment, but at the end of the
day create the best memories and most enjoyable solutions; not following a guide to the letter and never thinking outside of the steps given. And
often, a new best solution may be discovered and a new guide may be written. These new solutions do not always need to be something huge, and can
be as little as coming up with a silly mnemonic such as "the sad mad super dad said
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The At San Jose State University Music Hall
This performance was located at San Jose State University Music Hall. Most of the audience wore informal attires(dressed casually). The other
audience were members from the San Jose State Symphony Orchestra, SJYCO Senior Youth Orchestra, and Ad Lib Orchestra who wore formal
attires. Throughout the concert, I was somewhat a casual listener and mostly a referential listener. I was somewhat a casual listener because I didn't
know the name of the artist or piece, however, I paid attention to the music. I considered myself a referential listener because, while I was hearing the
presto tempo and crescendo dynamic, I pictured Mickey Mouse running away from an evil monster. When the tempo suddenly changed from presto
to adagio and the dynamic changed from crescendo to piano, I imagined a turn of events. The monster returning to its lair and the darkness fading.
Flowers growing around Mickey Mouse. The sun appearing and smiling in the sky. I pictured these memories because ever since I was a kid, I've
watched black and white Mickey Mouse cartoons with the orchestra music playing in the background. As a result, I was a referential listener. I wasn't
a perceptive listener because this event was my first musical performance I've ever attended and I was so into the music.
The pieces played in this performance were Humoreske by Bernard Alt, Ecos Armonicos by Craig H. Russell, Concerto Grosso by Ralph Vaughan
Williams, Finlandia by Jean Sibelius, Concerto for Bass Tuba by Ralph
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The DVC Symphonic Band
On Saturday, October 1st, 2016, I attended a performance by The DVC Symphonic Band at the Performing Arts Center at Diablo Valley College.
The symphony was composed of wind, brass, and percussions sections as well as a string bass and a piano. The musicians were all dressed in black
with a blue haired clarinetist and a pink haired French horn player. The Performing Arts Center was bustling with attendees of all ages. There were
young students holding notebooks and laughing and repeatedly changing seats. There were older concert goers wearing blazers and serious
expressions. A man in a black suit and a bow tie was sitting in an aisle seat holding an oboe. The atmosphere was cheerful and lively. I listened with
great interest to Martin Ellerby's
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Persuasive Essay On Auditioning
"Tuba number ten, please do not talk in this audition. If you have a question please step out and ask the door manager. Let's begin! Please play
your Bb major scale," and "Drum major, is your band ready?" send me to an entirely new world of focus. My heart races when I hear these words.
Everything I have ever practiced eludes me in these moments yet could not be more clear. The struggles I have dealt with in music have completely
changed my view on every aspect of my life. Failure is inevitable in music, but the setbacks of auditioning, my musical walk, and my time in marching
band have made success even sweeter than I could have ever imagined and have taught me a great deal about myself. Auditioning has always
haunted me. The nerves build up regardless of preparedness and whether or not I can handle it could potentially be detrimental. Over the years,
failure in my craft has taught me that fear is not an option. Fear has held me back. Being judged is all part of a musician's life. We go to assessments
to be judged on performance and musical ability. The same thing goes for singular assessments. Auditions judge an individual for how well they do
under extreme pressure. Auditions, to me, do not fully show the potential of an individual musician. For example, I can play a mean tuba, but when I get
behind that screen I lose every ounce of musical ability I have ever known. For example, One time in the 9th grade, I auditioned for all district band. I
had practiced for so long
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
John Williams Concerto For The Boston Symphony And Pops
In 1985 the famous movie composer John Williams (Star Wars, Raiders of the
Lost Ark, 1941) wrote a tuba concerto for Chester Schmitz, longtime tubist of the Boston
Symphony and Pops Orchestras. The gravity of this addition to the repertoire cannot be overstated, as this piece has become a close second in
popularity to the Ralph Vaughan
Williams concerto and has likely affected many a composer who has attempted to write a concerto for the tuba since. The piece is filled with
identifiable themes, tonal harmonies, lengthy melodic lines, and idiomatic writing making this piece highly enjoyable for both audience and performer.
The first movement opens with a powerfully optimistic melody stated by the tuba over a recurring string (in this case piano)
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Boston Brass Analysis
Ranging from playing pieces by J.S. Bach to pieces by Billy Joel, The Boston Brass is a brass quintet with a french horn, two trumpets, a tuba, and a
trombone that recognizes works from many different genres in a concert, including Orchestra, Opera, Ballet, Jazz, Broadway, and more. Their concert
Friday night, on September 15th in the Concert hall of the Forbes Center featured a wide variety of music that the group excelled at playing, including
concert highlights of "Milonga del Angel" or "Gathering of the Angels" by Astor Piazzolla, a surprise performance of "The Little Feud in G Minor"
by J.S. Bach, "Fly Me to the Moon" by Frank Sinatra and "Caravan" by Duke Ellington. The group's charisma with both the audience and each other
made the performance a 'must–see' and a wonderful way to spend an evening. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The song is made a joy to listen to due to the way it plays with tempo and dynamics, having sections that are adagio and piano followed by sections
that are allegro and forte. The faster sections also feature some very challenging runs that many times turned into pieces of chromatic scales. In the
allegro section of the work, the variations on the melody began, with each variation cutting the notes values in seemingly half, i.e. from quarter notes to
eight notes to sixteenth notes, and showing off the whole of Domingo Pagliuca's playing abilities and musical talents. With each variation, the audience
grew more and more impressed which is why the song was such an effective part of the concert; it was during this song that the audience began to pay
close attention to the band and connect with the music due to Mr. Pagliuca's ability on the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Personal Narrative: My First Band Director
I remember the first time I met my first band director. His name was Mr. Dan Norman, and he worked at the middle school I was attending. When
I was in fifth grade, I contemplated on joining band under the direction of Mr. Brian Enabnit, but that didn't follow through. My sixth grade year
was the most significant year of schooling for me. A few weeks into school, and not knowing anyone in my classes, I decided to talk to the school
band director to find potential in me playing an instrument. At the time, I didn't know anyone in band; I just wanted to become apart of it. "Welcome
to band! I'm Mr. Norman and I am the director here at Roosevelt." His voice was very sincere and welcoming. "Thank you. I'm Emily Tigges." I stated
nervously. "Well... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Why don't we try those first." He handed me a french horn. "Now can you blow through it? Try to tense the muscles around your lips and blow
through it." When I tried to blow through it, I could see in his eyes that he wanted to plug his ears. It sounded horrible. So I knew that wasn't the right
fit for an instrument. "I don't think that instrument had the name Emily Tigges written all over it." He sat for a minute and thought about which one
to try next. "Ahh, "he replied, "How about this one." He handed me a euphonium. I remember the distinct smell of valve oil and slide grease; singeing
my nostrils. I remember having butterflies in my stomach from touching the silky bass. I remember the way I looked in the distorted brass; almost like
a funhouse mirror. And he somehow knew this instrument was going to be the instrument for me. I blew into it, and the sound that came out was very
distinct. It was a low–toned instrument that was very pretty. "This is the instrument for you. However, we are in a need of a tuba. We will get you
started on an euphonium to get use to the music and gaining musicality, but next year we will switch you to tuba. The instruments are very similar, it
is just that the tuba is a lower sound and a bigger version of the euphonium. " Mr. Norman stated. I didn't know what a tuba was, but playing the
euphonium brought me a lot of joy. It was fun and relaxing to
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Analytical Review Of Jaws
The shark theme appeared for the first time on the film during the opening credits, with the camera view under the sea symbolizing the view of the
shark when it swims underwater. The theme has couple music arrangements played by different instruments which are bass, celli, trombone and tuba.
Part of the music seems be played by alternating two notes. Apart from that, the music is also played in high register and has a menacing tone. Part of
the music is in slow tempo, part of it has fast tempo.
The slow tempo part of the theme is signifying the behavior of the shark that comes to its victim quietly and cautiously without the acknowledgement of
the victim. Meanwhile, the fast tempo part of the theme symbolizes the moment when the shark attacks
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Tuba Object
The first thing that jumps out is the tuba placed where the elephant's head should be. It looks very out of place, this big, brass, instrument. The only
detail that stands out as different from a normal elephant is that ridiculously harsh–looking tuba. In place of a tusk is the mouthpiece. Why does this
elephant only have one tusk? There are two more elephants in the background that also have tuba heads, but these don't stick out as prominently as the
one in front. My eye is then drawn to the bottom left side. There is tall grass with a gazelle, watching the elephant. But the grass isn't really grass! It is
an assortment of brass instruments, from a pair of cymbals to a french horn, twisted and tangled together. The gazelle's horns form a
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Roger Bobo Essay
This piece is originally written for an iconic 20th–century tuba virtuoso Roger Bobo in December 1966 while they both, Roger Bobo and William
Kraft, took a position with the Los Angeles Philharmonic. ENCOUNTER II for Solo Tuba is a member of Williams Kraft's Encounter series. This
piece contains many extremely difficult techniques for tuba such as an extremely wide range of the instrument, a complicated dissonant jump intervals,
multiphonics, glissandi, and rapid half–valves technique. Those techniques are big development and challenge to the tuba players. Moreover, these
document also an expectation to the wider more multitudinous genre of music. William Kraft himself has mentioned about his Encounter II for solo
tuba, from the book title ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The first thing Roger and I did was spend a day together, during which we engaged in a creative interplay of ideas and exploration of the instruments
possibilities. The resultant work was, as Roger described it in the liner notes of his second recording of the piece, higher, lower, faster (probably
louder or softer) than any previous work for the tuba. "From the multitude of techniques that evolved, I chose those which I felt were best suited for a
piece that was basically expressive along relatively traditional lines. Certain exploratory techniques were eliminated to suit the aesthetics of the
piece–an aesthetic in which I wanted to show the truly musical possibilities of the instrument without delving into effects for their own sake. I wanted
the challenge of writing a set of variations for a solo instrument which would create the illusion of accompanying itself, by using various dynamic
levels, varying pitch registrations, and especially by utilizing the voice while playing. Much of what resulted was due to Roger Bobo's remarkable
virtuosity as well as his creative intelligence." (Bird,
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Concert Band Vs Marching Band Essay
Sometimes, a talent is a blessing. However, it can also bring a lifetime of toil.
Both in middle school and high school, I stayed in the elective Band. There exist two types of bands in the school: Concert Band and Marching Band.
In Concert Band, you choose and play an instrument. Based on which one you play, you could receive the melodic material or the accompaniment.
Marching Band, however, has elevated difficulty by forcing you to march and play simultaneously. The marching instruments could be the same
instrument, an alternate form of the instrument, or another instrument if you play a concert instrument which you cannot march. I play an instrument
called the tuba which almost always has the bass line, usually plays longer notes than the rest of the band, and gets an occasional solo by a fluke
While on a family trip in the summer after 7th grade, I traveled to China for a purpose to tour the country's largest monuments. I indeed received
knowledge about the history of China, but there was something else I learned from ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Two months after school started, I crashed into a state of depression. After being told multiple times that there would be no way out of means since
my sousaphone and tuba skills outmatch the majority of the same instruments section, I then concluded that I will forever suffer by playing
sousaphone and tuba. I now felt like I was enslaved into the sousaphone and that the only way out was ending my life. The following Thursday was
the day I finally mentioned of a possibility of committing suicide because I felt it would get me out of playing sousaphone. Despite longing for an
escape route out of life, I cleared my issue the day later. I finally resolved this issue by discussing with the high school band director. He would let me
do something I dreamed of for a long time. The solution was that I would march baritone saxophone in my sophomore
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Having A Good Tua Player
With all good bands there is a tuba, and if you want the band to be good then you are going to have a good tuba player. Tuba is not the easiest
instrument to play or hold, but with a little bit of effort and practice you can be apart of a great band. Playing the tuba can be very fun and is quite
interesting to play. With no tuba in a band there is no band because the tuba is the foundation of all real bands. In order to play the tuba first you are
going to have to know how to hold the instrument itself. To hold the tube you have be sitting down first off because it is such a immense instrument.
once you sit down with the tuba you have to have the bottom part of the tuba resting on the chair in between your legs. After you do that you hold
one hand on the base of the instrument and one hand on the keys. When holding the keys you have keep 1 finger on each of the three keys, you
cannot let your fingers off of the key while playing notes even if you are using that key. When you have the positioning of your hands on the keys
correctly and you can... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
If you want to play notes you have to concurrently hold the keys down and blow into the mouthpiece as elucidated in the steps before. There are
all sorts of high and low notes that you can play with just the 3 keys on the tuba. Since you know how to hold the tuba, push air through the tuba,
and play notes with the tuba you now can begin to play various amounts of scales that involve several different keys to play notes from high to low
notes. All great tuba players learn these steps when they first started out. All it takes is practice and you too can be a great tuba player and maybe be
apart of a great band as well. Like they always practice makes perfect. The tuba is a exciting and gracious instrument to play. The more the tuba
players out there the more great bands are formed maybe you can be the next great tuba
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Sameer Patel's Frightful Symphony
On November 5th, 2015 an exquisite and delightful symphony was conducted by Sameer Patel that is recognized by audiences and musicians for his
musicality and his passion towards music. The symphony focus for this show was the brass which encompass a wide range of different instruments
including trumpets, tubas and trombones that stole the spotlight. Also joining the orchestra a world–renowned Norwegian tuba soloist named Oystein
Baadsvik that made his debut in the symphony, by playing a Norwegian Folk Song named Fnugg. In Fnugg, Oystein Baadsvik does something that
makes him unique compared to other tuba players, he uses double tonging that allows him to sound like he his beat boxing with his instrument. While
double tonging, Oystein also sings into his instrument that creates multiphonics. I admired this piece because it is very entertaining and also his use of
... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The overture begins with a fanfare in the brass, followed by a fast melody in the winds. The strings take up this melody and the piece reaches a climax
with a four–note motif. Suddenly, the music reaches a more lyrical melody in the horns and cellos, although the tempo remains the same. Then the brass
take the finally with a high–spirited and lively ending with the focus on the trumpets. This piece is marvellous because it fits right into the symphony
of big bold brass. In the beginning and the end of the piece, the brass stole the show with cheerful and up lifting sections. The imagery in my head
when I listen to this piece is a war. In the beginning, the fanfare in the brass represents the armies preparing to go to war. Then when the strings and
horns take the melody, it represents the war occurring with the use of staccatos and accents to show the armies clashing together and the troops falling.
The ending with the brass exhibits one army winning the war and celebrating the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Richmond Symphony Youth Orchestra Analysis
On Sunday, February 28, 2016 at 4:00 pm, at the Carpenter Theatre Dominion Arts Center, the Richmond Symphony Youth Orchestra played side by
side with the Richmond Symphony. The instrumentation of the youth orchestra consisted of ten first violins, ten second violins, four violas, nine
cellos, five basses, three flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, three trumpets, three trombones, a tuba, and two harps. The
Richmond Symphony has twenty–one violins, seven violas, ten cellos, five double basses, three flutes, one piccolo, two oboes, one English horn, two
clarinets, two E–flat clarinets, one bass clarinet, two bassoons, a contrabassoon, four horns, three trumpets, two trombones, one bass trombone, a tuba, a
timpani, three
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Tuba Career Path
I really love music. I am in both band and choir, along with many other activities such as sports, FCCLA, Forensics, and NHS. I work at the Sonic
in Mulvane and absolutely love it along with the people I work with. I live with my dad and step mom and have three older sisters already in college
and two younger brothers. My future goal is to go to Cowley College for two years and afterward either attend Friends University or Southwestern
College for four years.
I have always been interested in Tuba playing ever since fifth grade. My research paper will be about how money will affect my career, how much
traveling will be necessary, the lifestyle I will have, and why I have chosen this career path. My Senior Project consists of taking at least
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Argumentative Essay: Stereotypes
"DON'T FEEL, TAKE CONTROL, BE PHYSICALLY STRONG, FIND YOUR IDENTITY IN MONEY AND WORK, DISTRUST EVERYTHING
YOU CANNOT SEE!!! DON'T CRY!!!"(putting down the gun) Most of these are things boys are taught at a young age(around 4–5), and in my
opinion it's wrong. It's wrong for many reasons, like why should boys have to be raised like this. It's been going on for a really long time, for example
african warriors, they had to undergo tests to become a man.I Feel like boys should be able grow up being able to be sensitive and like things that are
"girly" or "not manly".
Boys' favorite color is blue is a stereotype, even though a lot of boys' favorite color is blue, some boys like pink and despise blue. Which in the world
today is wrong, it's
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
What Is The Difference Between The Trombone And The Tua
A lot of people who don't really know much about instruments say that all instruments look the same, especially the trombone and the tuba. Of course,
some people who have brains know that they are very different from each other, or are they? For the few people that are still reading this and are
actually wondering what the heck is the difference between the trombone and the tuba then prepare. First, the history of the two instruments goes back
centuries, and although the two are somewhat related, the variations that they are available in suggesting otherwise. The trombone, for example, can
come in a abundance of different shapes and sizes, though they typically come in five sizes. The trombone's history tells a tale of mystery. Early
orchestras
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Instruments Used To Describe The Roman Trumpet
The word tuba comes from the Latin word tuba. This Latin term was used to describe the roman trumpet. The serpent was invented in France by
Edme Guillaume c. 1590s. The serpent had wooden, conical tubing and was 213cm long. The serpent had 6 finger holes and a cup mouthpiece. As
years passed other instruments were created before the tuba one of these was the tuba curva. In 1791 in Paris a brass instrument called the tuba curva
was created. This instrument was similar to the Roman trumpet and is considered the "forerunner to the modern tuba. Another instrument was the
ophicalide. This instrument was similar to the serpent because had conical tubing it also had a cup shaped mouthpiece. But Instead of Finger holes it
had keys and pads resembling a saxophone, also it was made out of brass instead of wood. Farther down the line of time in Berlin Johann Moritz and
Wilhelm Wieprecht invented the bass tuba in 1835 although it was not the first valved bass instrument it was the first to have the name tuba. Moritz
and Wieprecht's tuba was made out of brass keyed in F and had five valves. The tubas gave orchestras a pleasant bass sound. Hector berlioz a French
composer said that "Wieprecht's tuba was a bombardon with a improved mechanism and stated that its timbre was very much like that of the
ophicleide". There were two things that distinguished the tuba from the bombardon one is the wide bore and that the tuba has valves the bombardon
did not. "Berlioz was one of the first composers to embrace the tuba with enthusiasm, using it in virtually all his scores in ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
They also come in four different tunings the bass tuba in F and Eb and the contrabass tuba in C and Bb The bass and contrabass tubas are the largest
and lowest pitched instruments
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Tuba Performance Review Essay
What intrigues me the most about the tuba in this performance is that it is possible to play the lower notes very loudly. Normally, playing lower
pitches in the tuba requires slow buzzing and a lot of air. Towards the end, the soloist belted out the incredibly low notes. Additionally, throughout the
performance, I felt a range of emotions from feeling happy to very anxious. The short staccato notes makes me feel cheerful but towards the end, the
low pitched long notes makes me feel anxious and worried. Lastly, the short staccato notes that plays in a fast tempo intrigues me the most. Personally,
it is a challenge for me to play shorter notes at a fast tempo therefore I am mesmerized that it is attainable.
2. Identify any techniques that are heard in the provided piece that you yourself have never performed or heard before. Research and explain what
these techniques are called and how they are created. The techniques used in this performance that I have never heard of before is lip vibrato and
double tonguing. Lip vibrato is created by moving the jaw up and down in a "ya ya" motion. Another factor is slightly altering ... Show more content on
Helpwriting.net ...
This particular piece appeals to me because she expresses her emotions into the music. While playing, she sways with the tuba and I imagine her
telling a story with it. It reminds me of a mouse sneakily trying to get a piece of cheese but a cat catches sight of the mouse and chases it around.
The piece of music is very dark and harsh; it feels anxious and creepy as if something big is going to happen. The unique qualities in Concerto For
Bass Tuba are the complex melody and the large range. The piece contains many articulations, thirty–second notes, slurs and ties. In addition, at one part
of the performance Beth slurs from a high A to a low E. The music is extremely intense; from having short staccato notes to holding long lower
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Bruckner's 8th Symphony Essay
With a sense of mystery, highly acclaimed New York Philharmonic conductor Lorin Maazel opened Bruckner's 8th symphony with a tremolo on the
strings and then repeats this tremolando in forte while the brass gloriously brought in the first major theme. Amidst the bright colors and amazing
acoustics at Disney Hall, the audience sat in eager anticipation; many of the present members were experienced with Bruckner's pieces and Wagnerian
style. Sitting next to me, David Barry of the LA Philharmonic Board of Directors gave me an introduction to the history of Disney Hall, the LA
Philharmonic musicians, and Anton Bruckner. He quickly detailed several prominent musicians' profiles, including that of the only timpanist at the
concert, and then, he ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
This astounding range of emotions, within just a few bars, was so new to me; at first, I was afraid that I misunderstood the music. I had never heard
music with such a strong Romantic style before, but as the concert went on, I let the music wash over myself and lead my imagination to experience
Bruckner's dazzling array of emotions portrayed in this work.
Maazel's brilliant portrayal of Bruckner's swaying emotions was evident as the pizzicato on the strings transitioned into the brass, fiercely bellowing the
third theme. With my inexperience, I was rather uncomfortable with the sudden and almost jarring shifts in the mood at first, but gradually, I began to
appreciate how Bruckner alternated between his themes, using them, as Mark Swed of the LA Times noted, as gigantic melodic building blocks to
construct a massive "cathedral of sound." Despite the complex, intertwining development of the three themes, the first movement vanishingly
surrendered itself, as elusively as the introduction.
In the subsequent scherzo, David Berry explained some of the influences of Beethoven, my favorite composer, had on Bruckner's piece. Although I
didn't really understand much, the second movement's numerous reiterations of the bold principal theme left me feeling as if I were caught in a
powerful thunderstorm of divine glory, a contrast of loving compassion for the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Brahms ' First Symphony, An Angelic Alliance Of Flutes Essay
In Johannes Brahms' first symphony, an angelic alliance of flutes hypnotizes the audience with delicate notes that form a scenic melody. In the
distance, I am blowing until my face turns blue into a large goofy instrument that hardly anyone notices. When I picked up the tuba during my junior
year of high school, I quickly became accustomed to less glamorous musical parts, long notes of loosely buzzing lips, and pages of paramount silence.
Worst of all, playing the tuba never quite made me a "ladies' man." Yet my short–lived stint as a tubist sparked an appreciation in me for the humble
instrument's significance. Were it not for the deep rumbling of the tubas which mirror the melody step–for–step, coloring the piece to a new depth,
Brahms' rich masterpiece would undeservingly sound hollow.
My relationship with technology greatly parallels my experience in the band room.
In my first two years at Howard University, I lived among flutes in Washington D.C.'s technology scene, attending hackathons and technology meet–ups.
Armed with a spoonful of programming knowledge and a wave of enthusiasm, I seized every opportunity to grow through the people I encountered.
Although I learned plenty from them about powerful tools, what I took away as a part of me was their reasons for loving tech. A desire to reduce
traffic accidents in D.C.; a burning passion to help former inmates re–enter society; an urgent need for police accountability in minority neighborhoods.
The following year, I
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Tuba City Boarding School Case Study
The Tuba City mission trip will be focused on serving in the Tuba City Boarding School. According to the school's website, the boarding school has
"55 General Education classrooms, 2 Gifted and Talented classrooms, 5 Native American Education classrooms, and 6 large Computer Labs serving
approximately 1200 Pre–Kindergarten through Eighth grade students" (TBHS). The school was established in 1898 and was located in Blue Canyon.
Since its creation, it has moved several times until it was established in Tuba City, where it has stayed since 1901 (TBHS). It has grown over the
years, and now serves both Navajo and Hopi children. The mission statement for the school is "At Tuba City Boarding School, children are first,
important, unique, responsible, and nurtured. Opportunities are provided for positive, life–long learning, healthy growth, success, and self–worth. A
quality education is supported in a safe and culturally competent environment. Parents, community and school, together, educating the whole child for
life" (TBHS). The first part of the mission statement focuses on the children. The Tuba City Boarding School wants to be a safe place for the children
to learn and grow. The children are the focus of the school. I think that this is important because the school includes two different tribes, which
sometimes do not get along with ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The first is the shattered relationship between the United States and the Native Americans. The main goal for our trip is to be respectful and
understanding that some of the people on the reservation may not like us being there. We have to help foster a better relationship with the Native
Americans. Ms. Hardie has stated that it is important that we act appropriately because the university has become close to the school as well as the
reservation, and it will be difficult to rebuild the relationship if it is ever
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Gunther Schuller's Music For Brass Ensemble
In the second movement of his Music for Brass Quintet, Gunther Schuller utilizes unique articulations, rhythmic variance, and different combinations
of mutes resulting in tension built from the swiftly changing textures. Throughout the movement Schuller takes advantage of brass instruments ability
to double and triple tongue quickly. As seen in measure 3, he sets up thetrumpet, horn, and trombone to tongue at different speeds while raising in
dynamic. Due to the similar timbre of these instruments, the result is an unstable homophonic texture that sounds aggressive. Schuller then has the
instruments jump down to a piano dynamic. This decision is risky, due to the fact that all of the instruments are entering, and that it will be difficult...
Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The first instance is in measure 46, where all but the horn removes their mutes. While it would be assumed that the only muted voice would be the
foreground of the section, the opposite is presented here. The horn continues the ostinato figure from the previous figure. Overall this allows for the
rest of the ensemble to act as the solo voices collectively, and allows the rhythmic variance they have against the horn to stand out. In measure 68 we
see the opposite combination used, where everyone is muted except for the tuba. This was likely done so that the tuba would have a distinct difference
in color comparatively. This is necessary for its melodic line to cut through the ensemble. The end of the piece features the only change in the muted
horn in the movement. In measure 73 Schuller marks the horn to play half muted. This technique results in a hold unstable sound, perfect for summing
up the themes of the movement.
In Gunther Schuller's second movement of his Music for Brass Quintet, he utilizes brass instruments' range, articulations, and muting abilities to create
an unstable rhythmically complex piece that still carries a melodic
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
How Have Brass Instruments Changed Over Time
How have brass instruments have changed over time? Trumpets, French horns, trombones, and tubas are the four main instruments in the brass family.
Each has changed dramatically and will continue to change. Brass instrument come in all varieties. All brass instruments are curved and twisted to
allow for easier holding as well as playing. Brass instruments range in size from about six–and–a–half feet to 18 feet, normally. There have beens some
brass instruments invented that use nearly 60 feet of tubing. Trumpets are the smallest horns in size, when stretched out it is about six–and–a–half feet
long. Trumpets can play some of the highest pitches, and has an impressive range of three octaves. Trumpets have had a great deal of uses throughout...
Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The French horn is roughly 18 feet long, but it only looks like about seven or eight feet long. The reason for the size distortion is the French horns
shape. French horns have three full rings that connect the mouthpiece and the bell. Located between the mouthpiece and the bell are the three,
sometimes four, valves and the tubing that belongs with each separate valve. French horns can be made with three or four valves. Horns with three
valves are most commonly played in the key of F, while four valved horns can be played in the key of either F or Bb. The fourth valve allows the
performer to switch between F and Bb. The beginning French horns had no valves. The performer could only change their pitch through one of two
ways. The performer could switch the slide that determined the key of the horn, or they would just have to lip up the note. The French horn is the hardest
brass instrument to play due to the overtone series. The overtones on the French horn are really close together, and it is hard to hit the right partial,
especially while jumping. The overtone series, sometimes called the harmonic series starts low and spread out, but as it gets higher and higher, the
notes get closer and closer to each other, making it difficult to find the right
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Essay on Osmosis Investigation
Osmosis Investigation
How different concentrations of sucrose solution effect potato tissue.
Aim
How do different concentrations of sucrose solution effect potato tissue. Background Information
Osmosis is the movement of water molecules though a partially permeable membrane from an area of high water potential to an area of low water
potential.
High Concentration
Low Concentration
The membrane lets small water molecules pass though but not large ones. The flow continues until the concentration becomes the same on the inside as
on the outside. This is called equilibrium.
Molarity is a measure of concentration.
Prediction
I predict that the potato will change in mass and in length. I believe
this ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
7. I swiftly put 3 potato chips into each test tube and then started my stopwatch. 3 chips were used to create an average which gave me a better set of
results and more accurate graphs.
8. Whilst waiting I set out some paper towels with which I was going to dry the tuba.
9. After 15 minutes I drained out the solutions in the sink and placed all the tubas on the paper towel in the order. I wrote on these towels which molar
they came from and the test number.
10. I dried each chip with the paper towel and then placed each one on the scales so that I could weigh them.
11. Each potato was measured accurately on the electronic scales and then the weights were recorded.
12. When completing all the concentration I had got 3 results per concentration, I took an average of this result.
13. I then worked out the average % change in mass.
Conclusion
This graph shows the line of best fit for the percentage change in mass of the potato tubers over the course of the fifteen minute experiment. The graph
is a straight line that slopes upwards and does not go through the origin. Because the line is not very steep, I cannot say there is a strong relationship
between the mass and concentration. However, there is a pattern on my graph, and this is, as the concentration of the solution increases, the percentage
change in mass increases. The graph shows that the percentage gain and loss in directly
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Personal Narrative: Jury Failure
I couldn't believe it, but I knew that deep down I expected it. I knew I didn't pass my jury the moment I saw Mary's face when I asked to see my score
sheets. On each of those goldenrod colored pieces of paper, the phrase Jury Failed: Recommended additional semester of study was checked off. My
eyes quickly took in each of those scores; 67, 69, 62, 70. I knew that I was going to end my fall semester with a D in my tuba lessons. How pathetic
was that? A D in tuba lessons. I held back the tears that threatened to flow as I gave the sheets back to Mary to be filed forever in my portfolio.
Immediately after, I had to head back downstairs and take a Aural Skills sight–reading final. As if I would be able to focus on anything with this
bombshell dropped on me. I didn't allow myself to cry until I had finally gotten back to my dorm.... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
A complete and utter failure. If I couldn't even pass my jury, how was I supposed to be a good music teacher one day? How could I expect myself
to guide any and all band students I would potentially have? I started panicking over so much. What would my colleagues think of me? I was
probably a joke to them now. What would my parents think? Probably that paying for me to major in music was a waste of money. What would my
professor think? Well, he already knew considering he was there and checked one of those stupid Jury Failed: Recommended additional semester of
study
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Aspects Of Roman Life Regarding Music
The feelings that the Ancient Romans had towards music could be described as ambivalent. They admired it and at the same time, they condemned it.
Music, nevertheless, played a role in Roman society that, as time passed, became less and less important to the Romans. As a result, much of the
information about music in Ancient Rome has been lost in time. However what has been discovered about this topic is quite fascinating, in spite of what
it is lacking. The subsequent paragraphs will explain some of the aspects of Roman life regarding music. This includes the history of music in Ancient
Rome, the instruments that the Romans played, the uses of music in their society and the impact that music in Rome has had on the music of today.
The Romans were not the most innovative of ancient cultures when it came to music, as it wasn't held to the same importance in Rome as it was in
other cultures. Regardless, the Romans did very much enjoy music and admire its use in other cultures. And so, instead of creating a Roman version of
music, they borrowed the musical instruments and musical theory from those other cultures. One of them was Etruscans. Though the fact that the
Etruscans had an impact on music in Rome is known, the magnitude of that impact is unknown, but instruments used in Roman life such as the tuba
and the cornu are believed to have been borrowed from the Etruscans. However, it was the Greeks that had the greatest influence on Roman music. A
multitude of instruments used
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Music Analysis: Salve Marte By John Stevens
Salve Venere, Salve Marte by John Stevens
John Stevens (b. 1951) is an internationally renowned composer for his brass music, including settings such as solo tuba, euphonium and trombone,
tuba/euphonium ensemble, brass quintet and other brass chamber combinations. Many of his pieces in those respected ensemble settings have become
standard in the repertoire, and are used in many competitions due to their technical requirements and their complex musical interpretations. He recently
retired as Professor of tuba/euphonium at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, but still remains an active musician in the Wisconsin Brass Quintet
and other musical activities.
Salve Venere, Salve Marte is a contemporary and complex unaccompanied piece for solo tuba.... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The story is about a Kentucky coal miner that "...just about owes his soul to the company store." The miner works for years and goes forever without
being paid "one red cent" in "..real honest–to–goodness money". However, he can always go to the company store where he could spend his scrip
(little brass coins given to employees to charge to their accounts when they needed things). Being that it wasn't actual money, the miner always felt
like he was in debt to company store and the only way he could attempt to pay it back was to keep on loadin' 16 tons of coal a day. – This toe–tapping
ragtime arrangement by Ingo Luis is energetic and fun, and incorporates glissandos and smooth bass lines
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Tuba Section Leader Report
I'm the tuba section leader in the Pride of Broken Arrow (my high school marching band) for my junior and senior year and i'm also a leading and
active member at my church, especially in the youth group. Doing those things are very important to me because they gave me some leading
experience early on in my adulthood that many people don't get until college or after they start working. Being the Tuba Section leader for two years
has been very beneficial to me because I learned leadership skills that a majority people don't learn till they're in college or even later. Being in the
Pride of Broken Arrow has taught me that good leaders lead by example. Before I was the section leader the section leader we had was Carter, he was
not a good
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Marching Band Application Essay
A primary characteristics that defines who I am as an individual is my musical interests and abilities. I grew up in a house that has been massively
influenced by the art of music. My family has celebrated it for generations. My parents tell me stories about concerts that they and my extended
family went to when they were younger. They saw shows like the Beatles, the Grateful Dead, Bruce Springsteen, the Clash, Steve Earle, U2, Van
Morrison, etc. They took me to several of these concerts when I was very young. One of my most memorable experiences was at a Patti Smith
concert when I was 2 years old where I pumped my fist at a song that I did not understand. These days, my family has settled down to focus more on
me and my brother's future, but every few months there is a special occasion where we would go see something new and refreshing. As a Bender, I
absorbed a great deal of knowledge as well as a unique musical taste. I knew I wanted to become a part of music by learning how to play a musical
instrument. I was not sure how I would become a musician or what instrument I would learn to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
Marching Band exposed a whole new level of musicality. I learned to play louder, stronger, and quicker. My dynamics and articulations improved.
Even my physicality stabilized through the intensive marching exercises. Marching Band also opened up a new community that I could call
Home. It was a great transition from Middle School to High School. I had a group of friends that I accepted me as one of their own. As the
Marching seasons went by, I constantly improved my skills, and by my junior year, I was the section leader for the Sousaphones. In concert band, I
continued my efforts to improve my skills. I joined the symphonic winds in my sophomore year and became first chair by the end of the year. I was
a part of the elite Symphonic Orchestra and I applied for District Honor Band. I even joined the Jazz Band where I learned how to play the
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Leonard Falcone International Euphonium And Tuba Festival...
The Leonard Falcone International Euphonium and Tuba Festival first began as a summer euphonium competition that worked in conjunction with the
Blue Lake Fine Arts Camp in Twin Lakes, Michigan. Its creation was planned by Fritz Stansell, Seymour Okun, Henry Nelson, and Eldon Rosegart as
a palpable permanent way to honor the memory of Dr. Leonard Falcone, a famous euphonium player and teacher who served on faculty at Michigan
State University for 53 years. Its original primary objectives have been altered to include "and the tuba" since its instatement, however, currently the
objectives include: "...promoting the highest level of artistry on the euphonium and tuba; encouraging young musicians to study the euphonium and
tuba; enhancing the repertoire for the euphonium and tuba by commissioning and encouraging original compositions, transcriptions, and arrangements;
presenting master classes and performances by distinguished euphonium and tuba artists; and fostering increased awareness and appreciation for
euphonium and tuba by the general public."1 ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ...
The Euphonium Artist cash prizes included a $1000 plus a performance with the Blue Lake Festival Band for first place, $500 for second place, and
$200 for third place. The Euphonium Student cash prizes included $300 for first place, and $150 for second place.1 The initial board members along
with their colleagues and students, helped publicize and fundraise for the festival. However, it was the support of Blue Lake Fine Arts Camp and a small
executive committee including Donald Flickinger that kept the Festival alive during its first years. Important voluntary logistical operations were also
offered by Jim and Bill Gray, who in later years would later leave the festival to establish the Brass Band of Battle
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
The Symphony Orchestra At The Usf Concert Hall
On the afternoon of November 23rd, there was a performance by the USF Symphony Orchestra at the USF Concert Hall. Their performance, which
was masterful from beginning to end, featured guest artists Jay Hunsberger on the tuba and Dolly Roberts on the harp. The performance began with
Fanfare for the Common Man by Aaron Copland, a piece that started with a bang. The pang of a gong, and the beat of the drums, immediately
captured and captivated the audience from the start. The slow build that led up to the trumpets and other brass instruments folding in, possessed an
almost militaristic feel. Upon looking into the composer, it was no wonder why the triumphant sounds produced by the brass instruments came off
as militaristic. Copland composed the piece during World War II. According to Elizabeth Bergman Crist, Copland: " . . . committed himself to
creating music at once unabashedly modern he committed himself to creating music at once unabashedly modern and identifiably American. The
'desire to be American was symptomatic of the period,' he wrote in a later reminiscence. He recalled being 'anxious to write a work that would
immediately be recognized as American in character' and so turned to jazz as 'an easy way to be American in musical terms.' " ("Music for the
Common Man: Aaron Copland During the Depression and War," p. 3). It is obvious that Copland accomplished his goal of creating "American"
music. Fanfare for the Common Man is an iconic piece, often played in movies
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
Who Is John's Character
Benjamin Kats Mrs. S English 8 2 May 2017 John is a very quiet, and shy person. He would probably be described as an awkward character. He
doesn't have a lot of friends. John is just a kid in high school, who gets abused by his stepfather, and is trying to really hard to get by in life. John
talks to others mostly, "inside of his head." In most of the book, he is always in his thoughts. When he talks to his algebra teacher, he refers to her
as "Mrs. Moonface," describing her appearance. "You Don't know me and you will never". John is alone and has not very much or even a lot of
friends. He talks to himself and starts about his thoughts in his head as if anybody else would. John finds someone that he likes, Gloria "Hallelujah,
"as he says
... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...

More Related Content

More from Shannon Sand

More from Shannon Sand (19)

Mla Paper Example Sale Shopping, Sav
Mla Paper Example Sale Shopping, SavMla Paper Example Sale Shopping, Sav
Mla Paper Example Sale Shopping, Sav
 
Where To Buy Writing Paper Correspondence Cards
Where To Buy Writing Paper Correspondence CardsWhere To Buy Writing Paper Correspondence Cards
Where To Buy Writing Paper Correspondence Cards
 
Pin On ELEMENTARY EDUCATORS
Pin On ELEMENTARY EDUCATORSPin On ELEMENTARY EDUCATORS
Pin On ELEMENTARY EDUCATORS
 
Essay Structures Compare Contrast
Essay Structures Compare ContrastEssay Structures Compare Contrast
Essay Structures Compare Contrast
 
2 Paragraph Essay Examples. 2 Argumentativ
2 Paragraph Essay Examples. 2 Argumentativ2 Paragraph Essay Examples. 2 Argumentativ
2 Paragraph Essay Examples. 2 Argumentativ
 
Master Essay Writing Service In UK By Lilly Amber TpT
Master Essay Writing Service In UK By Lilly Amber TpTMaster Essay Writing Service In UK By Lilly Amber TpT
Master Essay Writing Service In UK By Lilly Amber TpT
 
Thesis Introduction Format. How To Write
Thesis Introduction Format. How To WriteThesis Introduction Format. How To Write
Thesis Introduction Format. How To Write
 
10 Small Changes That Will Have A Huge Impact On Your
10 Small Changes That Will Have A Huge Impact On Your10 Small Changes That Will Have A Huge Impact On Your
10 Small Changes That Will Have A Huge Impact On Your
 
Persuasive Writing Activities For 4Th Grade - Sandra Ro
Persuasive Writing Activities For 4Th Grade - Sandra RoPersuasive Writing Activities For 4Th Grade - Sandra Ro
Persuasive Writing Activities For 4Th Grade - Sandra Ro
 
Use Grid Paper To Make Final Notes Look Nice College N
Use Grid Paper To Make Final Notes Look Nice College NUse Grid Paper To Make Final Notes Look Nice College N
Use Grid Paper To Make Final Notes Look Nice College N
 
Reflection Essay How Many Paragraphs Is A Narrative E
Reflection Essay How Many Paragraphs Is A Narrative EReflection Essay How Many Paragraphs Is A Narrative E
Reflection Essay How Many Paragraphs Is A Narrative E
 
PPT - Narrative Writing PowerPoint Presentation, Free Download - ID2365974
PPT - Narrative Writing PowerPoint Presentation, Free Download - ID2365974PPT - Narrative Writing PowerPoint Presentation, Free Download - ID2365974
PPT - Narrative Writing PowerPoint Presentation, Free Download - ID2365974
 
FREE 10 Sample Thesis Statement Tem
FREE 10 Sample Thesis Statement TemFREE 10 Sample Thesis Statement Tem
FREE 10 Sample Thesis Statement Tem
 
Account Writing Sample GCE O Level English (112
Account Writing Sample GCE O Level English (112Account Writing Sample GCE O Level English (112
Account Writing Sample GCE O Level English (112
 
Narrative Story Dialogue Mark A
Narrative Story Dialogue Mark ANarrative Story Dialogue Mark A
Narrative Story Dialogue Mark A
 
Writing Letter On Parchment Paper
Writing Letter On Parchment PaperWriting Letter On Parchment Paper
Writing Letter On Parchment Paper
 
MLA Style Conclusion Works Cited - YouTube
MLA Style Conclusion Works Cited - YouTubeMLA Style Conclusion Works Cited - YouTube
MLA Style Conclusion Works Cited - YouTube
 
How To Write Scholarship Essay Pd
How To Write Scholarship Essay PdHow To Write Scholarship Essay Pd
How To Write Scholarship Essay Pd
 
Travel Essay Writing Templates - Beyond Mom
Travel Essay Writing Templates - Beyond MomTravel Essay Writing Templates - Beyond Mom
Travel Essay Writing Templates - Beyond Mom
 

Recently uploaded

Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
ZurliaSoop
 

Recently uploaded (20)

Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
Jual Obat Aborsi Hongkong ( Asli No.1 ) 085657271886 Obat Penggugur Kandungan...
 
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan FellowsOn National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
On National Teacher Day, meet the 2024-25 Kenan Fellows
 
Interdisciplinary_Insights_Data_Collection_Methods.pptx
Interdisciplinary_Insights_Data_Collection_Methods.pptxInterdisciplinary_Insights_Data_Collection_Methods.pptx
Interdisciplinary_Insights_Data_Collection_Methods.pptx
 
Exploring_the_Narrative_Style_of_Amitav_Ghoshs_Gun_Island.pptx
Exploring_the_Narrative_Style_of_Amitav_Ghoshs_Gun_Island.pptxExploring_the_Narrative_Style_of_Amitav_Ghoshs_Gun_Island.pptx
Exploring_the_Narrative_Style_of_Amitav_Ghoshs_Gun_Island.pptx
 
OSCM Unit 2_Operations Processes & Systems
OSCM Unit 2_Operations Processes & SystemsOSCM Unit 2_Operations Processes & Systems
OSCM Unit 2_Operations Processes & Systems
 
latest AZ-104 Exam Questions and Answers
latest AZ-104 Exam Questions and Answerslatest AZ-104 Exam Questions and Answers
latest AZ-104 Exam Questions and Answers
 
Plant propagation: Sexual and Asexual propapagation.pptx
Plant propagation: Sexual and Asexual propapagation.pptxPlant propagation: Sexual and Asexual propapagation.pptx
Plant propagation: Sexual and Asexual propapagation.pptx
 
SOC 101 Demonstration of Learning Presentation
SOC 101 Demonstration of Learning PresentationSOC 101 Demonstration of Learning Presentation
SOC 101 Demonstration of Learning Presentation
 
Basic Intentional Injuries Health Education
Basic Intentional Injuries Health EducationBasic Intentional Injuries Health Education
Basic Intentional Injuries Health Education
 
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptxBasic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
Basic Civil Engineering first year Notes- Chapter 4 Building.pptx
 
UGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdf
UGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdfUGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdf
UGC NET Paper 1 Mathematical Reasoning & Aptitude.pdf
 
Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)
Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)
Accessible Digital Futures project (20/03/2024)
 
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
Mehran University Newsletter Vol-X, Issue-I, 2024
 
Graduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - English
Graduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - EnglishGraduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - English
Graduate Outcomes Presentation Slides - English
 
ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptxICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
 
Beyond_Borders_Understanding_Anime_and_Manga_Fandom_A_Comprehensive_Audience_...
Beyond_Borders_Understanding_Anime_and_Manga_Fandom_A_Comprehensive_Audience_...Beyond_Borders_Understanding_Anime_and_Manga_Fandom_A_Comprehensive_Audience_...
Beyond_Borders_Understanding_Anime_and_Manga_Fandom_A_Comprehensive_Audience_...
 
Sociology 101 Demonstration of Learning Exhibit
Sociology 101 Demonstration of Learning ExhibitSociology 101 Demonstration of Learning Exhibit
Sociology 101 Demonstration of Learning Exhibit
 
How to Add New Custom Addons Path in Odoo 17
How to Add New Custom Addons Path in Odoo 17How to Add New Custom Addons Path in Odoo 17
How to Add New Custom Addons Path in Odoo 17
 
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptxHMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
HMCS Max Bernays Pre-Deployment Brief (May 2024).pptx
 
80 ĐỀ THI THỬ TUYỂN SINH TIẾNG ANH VÀO 10 SỞ GD – ĐT THÀNH PHỐ HỒ CHÍ MINH NĂ...
80 ĐỀ THI THỬ TUYỂN SINH TIẾNG ANH VÀO 10 SỞ GD – ĐT THÀNH PHỐ HỒ CHÍ MINH NĂ...80 ĐỀ THI THỬ TUYỂN SINH TIẾNG ANH VÀO 10 SỞ GD – ĐT THÀNH PHỐ HỒ CHÍ MINH NĂ...
80 ĐỀ THI THỬ TUYỂN SINH TIẾNG ANH VÀO 10 SỞ GD – ĐT THÀNH PHỐ HỒ CHÍ MINH NĂ...
 

The Concert At Uco Jass Lab

  • 1. The Concert At Uco Jass Lab On Tuesday, November 4 2014, I attended a tuba concert at UCO Jass Lab. The concert was performed by Paul Nesper, Adjunct Instructor of Tuba and Euphonium at UCO. He was accompanied by Samuel Magrill who assisted him on the piano. It was a heart touching performance, where Nesper played various renowned pieces by Bach, Tcherepnin, Bartz, Grant and Ewazen. The concert opened with Nesper playing Sonata No. 2 BWV 1028, the famous piece by Johann Sebastian Bach. This was one of Bach's most phenomenal piece of work. Nesper was very successfully able to recreate the music and present it in a very impressive way using the tuba. He was assisted by Magrill playing the piano as well. The mood was very soothing. The language of the music was very social and witty. Nesper played all four forms of the Sonata, namely Adagio, Allegro, Andante and Allegro. These exhibit an olderconcerto form with four alternating movements: slow, fast, slow, fast. It sounded to me like the slower ones were building up to and serving as introductions to the faster pieces. Both tuba and the piano went hand in hand and together created a very soothing and relaxing music. The opening form Adagio revealed the significance of both tuba and piano. Both instruments were used together as partners, creating an arioso–like melody, but also interlinking the melody parts together in such a way that each of them are equally essential to the overall line. Both instruments are partnered again in the following Allegro, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 2. Personal Narrative-Marching Band 1. Thirty pounds of metal resting on my left shoulder, I marched for hours in the blistering hot sun. The sousaphone was my greatest enemy. In 6th grade I was chosen to play tuba for our middle school band, I didn't like it at first, but it grew on me. Two years later, I had gotten pretty good. I made all state band, won some awards, and was 1st chair. I had no intention in joining the marching band my freshman year. It was the first day of summer, about 10 o' clock in the morning and my phone rang. It was a number I didn't recognize but I answered it anyway. "Hello Ms. Mullen are you coming today?" "Coming to what? Who is this?" "This is Mr. Sax, the High school band director. To marching band camp, we need you on tuba, I can have an... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... I was picked up from my house and driven to the school. I walked into the band director's office and he was surprised by how little I was. He said, "Wow. I don't know if your going to be strong enough to march tuba, maybe you can try baritone." I was appalled. Of course I'm strong enough to march tuba. "No, I'm going to play tuba" I said. I vividly remember the first time I placed the sousaphone on my shoulder. At first it was okay. I felt comfortable, like it would be a piece of cake, but let me tell you, there is a reason why most tuba players are big, tough 300 pound guys full of muscle. Here I was a 89 pound 14 year old girl, with a big hunk of metal on my shoulder. It felt fine for a few minutes, but after ten minutes it was as if my whole body was about to crumble into pieces while the band marched on. Although it was a large obstacle, I was determined to power through. So for 7 days I learned the marching drill. I memorized the music. I played the notes. I tried not to pass out and die. By the end of camp I had accumulated sunburn, a giant bruise on my left shoulder, and a sense of accomplishment. There truly is nothing better than doing something people say you can't ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 3. Cornu Instrument Analysis The instrument I chose was the Cornu. The reason why I chose this one was because I thought it would be similar to the cornet, which is just a smaller version of the trumpet, and I know how to play the trumpet. But, it is actually similar to a tuba; it's just very skinny and doesn't have any keys. When I first heard it, I thought it sounded like a very bad french horn, but when it's played by someone who actually knows how to play it very well it sounds like a brassy, harsh – but clear, horn sound. The cornu, which means "horn" in latin was used as a military instrument for the ancient Romans. Two of the instruments were found in the late 19th century buried in pompeii next to a Roman soldier. The military used it as a way to direct the movements ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 4. Sebastian Bach During The Baroque Period On November 13, 2015 Dr. David Earll of the University of Wisconsin Platteville faculty performed a Tuba and Euphonium Recital. The program for the recital included various 20th century works and their composers along with pieces from Antonio Capuzzi from the classical era and Sebastian Bach during the Baroque Era, whom was discussed in class. Works that were played include: "T. Rex for Tuba andPiano" by Mark Schultz, "My Mountain Top for Tuba and Tape" by Andy Scott, "Double –Bass Concerto (adapted for Euphonium)" by Antonio Capuzzi, "Alarum" by Edward Gregson, "Silhouette for Tuba and Piano" by John Harmon, and "Flute Sonata in Eb Major" by Johann Sebastian Bach. My favorite piece was "T. Rex" by Mark Schultz. I believe that brass instruments ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 5. The Imagination as a Coping Mechanism in You Don’t Know Me... The mind is a place for imagination and for thoughts. People use their thoughts and imagination in many ways to cope with problems. It is used as a place to escape the troubles of the real world. In You Don't Know Me by David Klass, John copes with his abuse and his teenage life by creating imaginary tribes to provide his alternate outcomes to situations, personifying objects and blaming them for his failures, and giving nicknames describing a bad quality they have. John creates an imaginary tribe to provide alternate outcomes to his problems if he was actually part of this tribe. He constantly states how he wishes he was in this tribe, because to him it would solve his problems. The tribe also has the same views has him, for example they view childhood as an obstacle they must overcome, as does he. Just as John faces his abusive father, the tribe faces an enemy tribe trying to kill them. "Now if I were a Lashasa Palulu, I would probably have kicked him [Stan] in the nose, because one advantage of walking on your hands is that it leaves your feet free for combat, but since I was not born into that tribe that is not a tribe, all I could do was start to cry, because the WHOP hurt so much" (Klass 16). John imagines that he could of beat up Stan and end his abuse if he was part of this tribe. He uses this tribe to come up with an alternate outcome to which he is not abused and all of his troubles with Stan are over. This helps John cope with his abuse. John personifies ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 6. NHS Merit Selection I believe that I do merit selection for NHS. One of the main reasons that I believe that I should be selected for the National Honor Society is my work outside of school hours. Outside of school I keep score for basketball and am very heavily involved at my church The House Mountain Grove. Other things that I do outside of school include various community projects including the Cabool "Seniors Rock" 5k run three years ago. At school events I represent Mansfield proudly, I have been first chair tuba in Summit Conference for a consecutive three years, and I made district band my freshman year. Other than the band I have also represented Mansfield for FBLA on a district, and state level both of my years ofhigh school. My other form of representing ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 7. Why Is Music Important To Me? Music can accomplish things. I learned this while working on composing something required to apply to a mentorship program, wherein theory and composition professors at the University of Bennington provide feedback and advice on how to improve on composition. To apply, a chamber piece was needed; this means a piece of music written for few instruments and with each instrument playing a separate part. I began with my daily process of improvising a melody on the piano before expanding it by adding a counter–melody. Many people talk about how they feel a "flow state" when they are focused on something that they love, and this is how I feel when writing and playing music. When I am in this state, I can see the connections between different notes; I can hear what should come next; I can anticipate the pushing and pulling as dissonances resolve and then ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Just like how music has no one way to arrange it, no one set of instruments to best bring it to life, many real life tasks have no one way to solve them. And ultimately, the journey is truly more important than the destination. Imagine how boring the world would be were every problem and question to be answered coldly and swiftly with the one best answer? Rather, the journey to discover a unique and possibly fun solution should be taken. Indeed, it is these divergences from the best or most efficient solution which may not always be beneficial in the moment, but at the end of the day create the best memories and most enjoyable solutions; not following a guide to the letter and never thinking outside of the steps given. And often, a new best solution may be discovered and a new guide may be written. These new solutions do not always need to be something huge, and can be as little as coming up with a silly mnemonic such as "the sad mad super dad said ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 8. The At San Jose State University Music Hall This performance was located at San Jose State University Music Hall. Most of the audience wore informal attires(dressed casually). The other audience were members from the San Jose State Symphony Orchestra, SJYCO Senior Youth Orchestra, and Ad Lib Orchestra who wore formal attires. Throughout the concert, I was somewhat a casual listener and mostly a referential listener. I was somewhat a casual listener because I didn't know the name of the artist or piece, however, I paid attention to the music. I considered myself a referential listener because, while I was hearing the presto tempo and crescendo dynamic, I pictured Mickey Mouse running away from an evil monster. When the tempo suddenly changed from presto to adagio and the dynamic changed from crescendo to piano, I imagined a turn of events. The monster returning to its lair and the darkness fading. Flowers growing around Mickey Mouse. The sun appearing and smiling in the sky. I pictured these memories because ever since I was a kid, I've watched black and white Mickey Mouse cartoons with the orchestra music playing in the background. As a result, I was a referential listener. I wasn't a perceptive listener because this event was my first musical performance I've ever attended and I was so into the music. The pieces played in this performance were Humoreske by Bernard Alt, Ecos Armonicos by Craig H. Russell, Concerto Grosso by Ralph Vaughan Williams, Finlandia by Jean Sibelius, Concerto for Bass Tuba by Ralph ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 9. The DVC Symphonic Band On Saturday, October 1st, 2016, I attended a performance by The DVC Symphonic Band at the Performing Arts Center at Diablo Valley College. The symphony was composed of wind, brass, and percussions sections as well as a string bass and a piano. The musicians were all dressed in black with a blue haired clarinetist and a pink haired French horn player. The Performing Arts Center was bustling with attendees of all ages. There were young students holding notebooks and laughing and repeatedly changing seats. There were older concert goers wearing blazers and serious expressions. A man in a black suit and a bow tie was sitting in an aisle seat holding an oboe. The atmosphere was cheerful and lively. I listened with great interest to Martin Ellerby's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 10. Persuasive Essay On Auditioning "Tuba number ten, please do not talk in this audition. If you have a question please step out and ask the door manager. Let's begin! Please play your Bb major scale," and "Drum major, is your band ready?" send me to an entirely new world of focus. My heart races when I hear these words. Everything I have ever practiced eludes me in these moments yet could not be more clear. The struggles I have dealt with in music have completely changed my view on every aspect of my life. Failure is inevitable in music, but the setbacks of auditioning, my musical walk, and my time in marching band have made success even sweeter than I could have ever imagined and have taught me a great deal about myself. Auditioning has always haunted me. The nerves build up regardless of preparedness and whether or not I can handle it could potentially be detrimental. Over the years, failure in my craft has taught me that fear is not an option. Fear has held me back. Being judged is all part of a musician's life. We go to assessments to be judged on performance and musical ability. The same thing goes for singular assessments. Auditions judge an individual for how well they do under extreme pressure. Auditions, to me, do not fully show the potential of an individual musician. For example, I can play a mean tuba, but when I get behind that screen I lose every ounce of musical ability I have ever known. For example, One time in the 9th grade, I auditioned for all district band. I had practiced for so long ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 11. John Williams Concerto For The Boston Symphony And Pops In 1985 the famous movie composer John Williams (Star Wars, Raiders of the Lost Ark, 1941) wrote a tuba concerto for Chester Schmitz, longtime tubist of the Boston Symphony and Pops Orchestras. The gravity of this addition to the repertoire cannot be overstated, as this piece has become a close second in popularity to the Ralph Vaughan Williams concerto and has likely affected many a composer who has attempted to write a concerto for the tuba since. The piece is filled with identifiable themes, tonal harmonies, lengthy melodic lines, and idiomatic writing making this piece highly enjoyable for both audience and performer. The first movement opens with a powerfully optimistic melody stated by the tuba over a recurring string (in this case piano) ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 12. The Boston Brass Analysis Ranging from playing pieces by J.S. Bach to pieces by Billy Joel, The Boston Brass is a brass quintet with a french horn, two trumpets, a tuba, and a trombone that recognizes works from many different genres in a concert, including Orchestra, Opera, Ballet, Jazz, Broadway, and more. Their concert Friday night, on September 15th in the Concert hall of the Forbes Center featured a wide variety of music that the group excelled at playing, including concert highlights of "Milonga del Angel" or "Gathering of the Angels" by Astor Piazzolla, a surprise performance of "The Little Feud in G Minor" by J.S. Bach, "Fly Me to the Moon" by Frank Sinatra and "Caravan" by Duke Ellington. The group's charisma with both the audience and each other made the performance a 'must–see' and a wonderful way to spend an evening. ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The song is made a joy to listen to due to the way it plays with tempo and dynamics, having sections that are adagio and piano followed by sections that are allegro and forte. The faster sections also feature some very challenging runs that many times turned into pieces of chromatic scales. In the allegro section of the work, the variations on the melody began, with each variation cutting the notes values in seemingly half, i.e. from quarter notes to eight notes to sixteenth notes, and showing off the whole of Domingo Pagliuca's playing abilities and musical talents. With each variation, the audience grew more and more impressed which is why the song was such an effective part of the concert; it was during this song that the audience began to pay close attention to the band and connect with the music due to Mr. Pagliuca's ability on the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 13. Personal Narrative: My First Band Director I remember the first time I met my first band director. His name was Mr. Dan Norman, and he worked at the middle school I was attending. When I was in fifth grade, I contemplated on joining band under the direction of Mr. Brian Enabnit, but that didn't follow through. My sixth grade year was the most significant year of schooling for me. A few weeks into school, and not knowing anyone in my classes, I decided to talk to the school band director to find potential in me playing an instrument. At the time, I didn't know anyone in band; I just wanted to become apart of it. "Welcome to band! I'm Mr. Norman and I am the director here at Roosevelt." His voice was very sincere and welcoming. "Thank you. I'm Emily Tigges." I stated nervously. "Well... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Why don't we try those first." He handed me a french horn. "Now can you blow through it? Try to tense the muscles around your lips and blow through it." When I tried to blow through it, I could see in his eyes that he wanted to plug his ears. It sounded horrible. So I knew that wasn't the right fit for an instrument. "I don't think that instrument had the name Emily Tigges written all over it." He sat for a minute and thought about which one to try next. "Ahh, "he replied, "How about this one." He handed me a euphonium. I remember the distinct smell of valve oil and slide grease; singeing my nostrils. I remember having butterflies in my stomach from touching the silky bass. I remember the way I looked in the distorted brass; almost like a funhouse mirror. And he somehow knew this instrument was going to be the instrument for me. I blew into it, and the sound that came out was very distinct. It was a low–toned instrument that was very pretty. "This is the instrument for you. However, we are in a need of a tuba. We will get you started on an euphonium to get use to the music and gaining musicality, but next year we will switch you to tuba. The instruments are very similar, it is just that the tuba is a lower sound and a bigger version of the euphonium. " Mr. Norman stated. I didn't know what a tuba was, but playing the euphonium brought me a lot of joy. It was fun and relaxing to ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 14. Analytical Review Of Jaws The shark theme appeared for the first time on the film during the opening credits, with the camera view under the sea symbolizing the view of the shark when it swims underwater. The theme has couple music arrangements played by different instruments which are bass, celli, trombone and tuba. Part of the music seems be played by alternating two notes. Apart from that, the music is also played in high register and has a menacing tone. Part of the music is in slow tempo, part of it has fast tempo. The slow tempo part of the theme is signifying the behavior of the shark that comes to its victim quietly and cautiously without the acknowledgement of the victim. Meanwhile, the fast tempo part of the theme symbolizes the moment when the shark attacks ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 15. Tuba Object The first thing that jumps out is the tuba placed where the elephant's head should be. It looks very out of place, this big, brass, instrument. The only detail that stands out as different from a normal elephant is that ridiculously harsh–looking tuba. In place of a tusk is the mouthpiece. Why does this elephant only have one tusk? There are two more elephants in the background that also have tuba heads, but these don't stick out as prominently as the one in front. My eye is then drawn to the bottom left side. There is tall grass with a gazelle, watching the elephant. But the grass isn't really grass! It is an assortment of brass instruments, from a pair of cymbals to a french horn, twisted and tangled together. The gazelle's horns form a ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 16. Roger Bobo Essay This piece is originally written for an iconic 20th–century tuba virtuoso Roger Bobo in December 1966 while they both, Roger Bobo and William Kraft, took a position with the Los Angeles Philharmonic. ENCOUNTER II for Solo Tuba is a member of Williams Kraft's Encounter series. This piece contains many extremely difficult techniques for tuba such as an extremely wide range of the instrument, a complicated dissonant jump intervals, multiphonics, glissandi, and rapid half–valves technique. Those techniques are big development and challenge to the tuba players. Moreover, these document also an expectation to the wider more multitudinous genre of music. William Kraft himself has mentioned about his Encounter II for solo tuba, from the book title ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The first thing Roger and I did was spend a day together, during which we engaged in a creative interplay of ideas and exploration of the instruments possibilities. The resultant work was, as Roger described it in the liner notes of his second recording of the piece, higher, lower, faster (probably louder or softer) than any previous work for the tuba. "From the multitude of techniques that evolved, I chose those which I felt were best suited for a piece that was basically expressive along relatively traditional lines. Certain exploratory techniques were eliminated to suit the aesthetics of the piece–an aesthetic in which I wanted to show the truly musical possibilities of the instrument without delving into effects for their own sake. I wanted the challenge of writing a set of variations for a solo instrument which would create the illusion of accompanying itself, by using various dynamic levels, varying pitch registrations, and especially by utilizing the voice while playing. Much of what resulted was due to Roger Bobo's remarkable virtuosity as well as his creative intelligence." (Bird, ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 17. Concert Band Vs Marching Band Essay Sometimes, a talent is a blessing. However, it can also bring a lifetime of toil. Both in middle school and high school, I stayed in the elective Band. There exist two types of bands in the school: Concert Band and Marching Band. In Concert Band, you choose and play an instrument. Based on which one you play, you could receive the melodic material or the accompaniment. Marching Band, however, has elevated difficulty by forcing you to march and play simultaneously. The marching instruments could be the same instrument, an alternate form of the instrument, or another instrument if you play a concert instrument which you cannot march. I play an instrument called the tuba which almost always has the bass line, usually plays longer notes than the rest of the band, and gets an occasional solo by a fluke While on a family trip in the summer after 7th grade, I traveled to China for a purpose to tour the country's largest monuments. I indeed received knowledge about the history of China, but there was something else I learned from ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Two months after school started, I crashed into a state of depression. After being told multiple times that there would be no way out of means since my sousaphone and tuba skills outmatch the majority of the same instruments section, I then concluded that I will forever suffer by playing sousaphone and tuba. I now felt like I was enslaved into the sousaphone and that the only way out was ending my life. The following Thursday was the day I finally mentioned of a possibility of committing suicide because I felt it would get me out of playing sousaphone. Despite longing for an escape route out of life, I cleared my issue the day later. I finally resolved this issue by discussing with the high school band director. He would let me do something I dreamed of for a long time. The solution was that I would march baritone saxophone in my sophomore ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 18. Having A Good Tua Player With all good bands there is a tuba, and if you want the band to be good then you are going to have a good tuba player. Tuba is not the easiest instrument to play or hold, but with a little bit of effort and practice you can be apart of a great band. Playing the tuba can be very fun and is quite interesting to play. With no tuba in a band there is no band because the tuba is the foundation of all real bands. In order to play the tuba first you are going to have to know how to hold the instrument itself. To hold the tube you have be sitting down first off because it is such a immense instrument. once you sit down with the tuba you have to have the bottom part of the tuba resting on the chair in between your legs. After you do that you hold one hand on the base of the instrument and one hand on the keys. When holding the keys you have keep 1 finger on each of the three keys, you cannot let your fingers off of the key while playing notes even if you are using that key. When you have the positioning of your hands on the keys correctly and you can... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... If you want to play notes you have to concurrently hold the keys down and blow into the mouthpiece as elucidated in the steps before. There are all sorts of high and low notes that you can play with just the 3 keys on the tuba. Since you know how to hold the tuba, push air through the tuba, and play notes with the tuba you now can begin to play various amounts of scales that involve several different keys to play notes from high to low notes. All great tuba players learn these steps when they first started out. All it takes is practice and you too can be a great tuba player and maybe be apart of a great band as well. Like they always practice makes perfect. The tuba is a exciting and gracious instrument to play. The more the tuba players out there the more great bands are formed maybe you can be the next great tuba ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 19. Sameer Patel's Frightful Symphony On November 5th, 2015 an exquisite and delightful symphony was conducted by Sameer Patel that is recognized by audiences and musicians for his musicality and his passion towards music. The symphony focus for this show was the brass which encompass a wide range of different instruments including trumpets, tubas and trombones that stole the spotlight. Also joining the orchestra a world–renowned Norwegian tuba soloist named Oystein Baadsvik that made his debut in the symphony, by playing a Norwegian Folk Song named Fnugg. In Fnugg, Oystein Baadsvik does something that makes him unique compared to other tuba players, he uses double tonging that allows him to sound like he his beat boxing with his instrument. While double tonging, Oystein also sings into his instrument that creates multiphonics. I admired this piece because it is very entertaining and also his use of ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The overture begins with a fanfare in the brass, followed by a fast melody in the winds. The strings take up this melody and the piece reaches a climax with a four–note motif. Suddenly, the music reaches a more lyrical melody in the horns and cellos, although the tempo remains the same. Then the brass take the finally with a high–spirited and lively ending with the focus on the trumpets. This piece is marvellous because it fits right into the symphony of big bold brass. In the beginning and the end of the piece, the brass stole the show with cheerful and up lifting sections. The imagery in my head when I listen to this piece is a war. In the beginning, the fanfare in the brass represents the armies preparing to go to war. Then when the strings and horns take the melody, it represents the war occurring with the use of staccatos and accents to show the armies clashing together and the troops falling. The ending with the brass exhibits one army winning the war and celebrating the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 20. Richmond Symphony Youth Orchestra Analysis On Sunday, February 28, 2016 at 4:00 pm, at the Carpenter Theatre Dominion Arts Center, the Richmond Symphony Youth Orchestra played side by side with the Richmond Symphony. The instrumentation of the youth orchestra consisted of ten first violins, ten second violins, four violas, nine cellos, five basses, three flutes, two oboes, two clarinets, two bassoons, two horns, three trumpets, three trombones, a tuba, and two harps. The Richmond Symphony has twenty–one violins, seven violas, ten cellos, five double basses, three flutes, one piccolo, two oboes, one English horn, two clarinets, two E–flat clarinets, one bass clarinet, two bassoons, a contrabassoon, four horns, three trumpets, two trombones, one bass trombone, a tuba, a timpani, three ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 21. Tuba Career Path I really love music. I am in both band and choir, along with many other activities such as sports, FCCLA, Forensics, and NHS. I work at the Sonic in Mulvane and absolutely love it along with the people I work with. I live with my dad and step mom and have three older sisters already in college and two younger brothers. My future goal is to go to Cowley College for two years and afterward either attend Friends University or Southwestern College for four years. I have always been interested in Tuba playing ever since fifth grade. My research paper will be about how money will affect my career, how much traveling will be necessary, the lifestyle I will have, and why I have chosen this career path. My Senior Project consists of taking at least ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 22. Argumentative Essay: Stereotypes "DON'T FEEL, TAKE CONTROL, BE PHYSICALLY STRONG, FIND YOUR IDENTITY IN MONEY AND WORK, DISTRUST EVERYTHING YOU CANNOT SEE!!! DON'T CRY!!!"(putting down the gun) Most of these are things boys are taught at a young age(around 4–5), and in my opinion it's wrong. It's wrong for many reasons, like why should boys have to be raised like this. It's been going on for a really long time, for example african warriors, they had to undergo tests to become a man.I Feel like boys should be able grow up being able to be sensitive and like things that are "girly" or "not manly". Boys' favorite color is blue is a stereotype, even though a lot of boys' favorite color is blue, some boys like pink and despise blue. Which in the world today is wrong, it's ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 23. What Is The Difference Between The Trombone And The Tua A lot of people who don't really know much about instruments say that all instruments look the same, especially the trombone and the tuba. Of course, some people who have brains know that they are very different from each other, or are they? For the few people that are still reading this and are actually wondering what the heck is the difference between the trombone and the tuba then prepare. First, the history of the two instruments goes back centuries, and although the two are somewhat related, the variations that they are available in suggesting otherwise. The trombone, for example, can come in a abundance of different shapes and sizes, though they typically come in five sizes. The trombone's history tells a tale of mystery. Early orchestras ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 24. Instruments Used To Describe The Roman Trumpet The word tuba comes from the Latin word tuba. This Latin term was used to describe the roman trumpet. The serpent was invented in France by Edme Guillaume c. 1590s. The serpent had wooden, conical tubing and was 213cm long. The serpent had 6 finger holes and a cup mouthpiece. As years passed other instruments were created before the tuba one of these was the tuba curva. In 1791 in Paris a brass instrument called the tuba curva was created. This instrument was similar to the Roman trumpet and is considered the "forerunner to the modern tuba. Another instrument was the ophicalide. This instrument was similar to the serpent because had conical tubing it also had a cup shaped mouthpiece. But Instead of Finger holes it had keys and pads resembling a saxophone, also it was made out of brass instead of wood. Farther down the line of time in Berlin Johann Moritz and Wilhelm Wieprecht invented the bass tuba in 1835 although it was not the first valved bass instrument it was the first to have the name tuba. Moritz and Wieprecht's tuba was made out of brass keyed in F and had five valves. The tubas gave orchestras a pleasant bass sound. Hector berlioz a French composer said that "Wieprecht's tuba was a bombardon with a improved mechanism and stated that its timbre was very much like that of the ophicleide". There were two things that distinguished the tuba from the bombardon one is the wide bore and that the tuba has valves the bombardon did not. "Berlioz was one of the first composers to embrace the tuba with enthusiasm, using it in virtually all his scores in ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... They also come in four different tunings the bass tuba in F and Eb and the contrabass tuba in C and Bb The bass and contrabass tubas are the largest and lowest pitched instruments ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 25. Tuba Performance Review Essay What intrigues me the most about the tuba in this performance is that it is possible to play the lower notes very loudly. Normally, playing lower pitches in the tuba requires slow buzzing and a lot of air. Towards the end, the soloist belted out the incredibly low notes. Additionally, throughout the performance, I felt a range of emotions from feeling happy to very anxious. The short staccato notes makes me feel cheerful but towards the end, the low pitched long notes makes me feel anxious and worried. Lastly, the short staccato notes that plays in a fast tempo intrigues me the most. Personally, it is a challenge for me to play shorter notes at a fast tempo therefore I am mesmerized that it is attainable. 2. Identify any techniques that are heard in the provided piece that you yourself have never performed or heard before. Research and explain what these techniques are called and how they are created. The techniques used in this performance that I have never heard of before is lip vibrato and double tonguing. Lip vibrato is created by moving the jaw up and down in a "ya ya" motion. Another factor is slightly altering ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This particular piece appeals to me because she expresses her emotions into the music. While playing, she sways with the tuba and I imagine her telling a story with it. It reminds me of a mouse sneakily trying to get a piece of cheese but a cat catches sight of the mouse and chases it around. The piece of music is very dark and harsh; it feels anxious and creepy as if something big is going to happen. The unique qualities in Concerto For Bass Tuba are the complex melody and the large range. The piece contains many articulations, thirty–second notes, slurs and ties. In addition, at one part of the performance Beth slurs from a high A to a low E. The music is extremely intense; from having short staccato notes to holding long lower ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 26. Bruckner's 8th Symphony Essay With a sense of mystery, highly acclaimed New York Philharmonic conductor Lorin Maazel opened Bruckner's 8th symphony with a tremolo on the strings and then repeats this tremolando in forte while the brass gloriously brought in the first major theme. Amidst the bright colors and amazing acoustics at Disney Hall, the audience sat in eager anticipation; many of the present members were experienced with Bruckner's pieces and Wagnerian style. Sitting next to me, David Barry of the LA Philharmonic Board of Directors gave me an introduction to the history of Disney Hall, the LA Philharmonic musicians, and Anton Bruckner. He quickly detailed several prominent musicians' profiles, including that of the only timpanist at the concert, and then, he ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... This astounding range of emotions, within just a few bars, was so new to me; at first, I was afraid that I misunderstood the music. I had never heard music with such a strong Romantic style before, but as the concert went on, I let the music wash over myself and lead my imagination to experience Bruckner's dazzling array of emotions portrayed in this work. Maazel's brilliant portrayal of Bruckner's swaying emotions was evident as the pizzicato on the strings transitioned into the brass, fiercely bellowing the third theme. With my inexperience, I was rather uncomfortable with the sudden and almost jarring shifts in the mood at first, but gradually, I began to appreciate how Bruckner alternated between his themes, using them, as Mark Swed of the LA Times noted, as gigantic melodic building blocks to construct a massive "cathedral of sound." Despite the complex, intertwining development of the three themes, the first movement vanishingly surrendered itself, as elusively as the introduction. In the subsequent scherzo, David Berry explained some of the influences of Beethoven, my favorite composer, had on Bruckner's piece. Although I didn't really understand much, the second movement's numerous reiterations of the bold principal theme left me feeling as if I were caught in a powerful thunderstorm of divine glory, a contrast of loving compassion for the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 27. Brahms ' First Symphony, An Angelic Alliance Of Flutes Essay In Johannes Brahms' first symphony, an angelic alliance of flutes hypnotizes the audience with delicate notes that form a scenic melody. In the distance, I am blowing until my face turns blue into a large goofy instrument that hardly anyone notices. When I picked up the tuba during my junior year of high school, I quickly became accustomed to less glamorous musical parts, long notes of loosely buzzing lips, and pages of paramount silence. Worst of all, playing the tuba never quite made me a "ladies' man." Yet my short–lived stint as a tubist sparked an appreciation in me for the humble instrument's significance. Were it not for the deep rumbling of the tubas which mirror the melody step–for–step, coloring the piece to a new depth, Brahms' rich masterpiece would undeservingly sound hollow. My relationship with technology greatly parallels my experience in the band room. In my first two years at Howard University, I lived among flutes in Washington D.C.'s technology scene, attending hackathons and technology meet–ups. Armed with a spoonful of programming knowledge and a wave of enthusiasm, I seized every opportunity to grow through the people I encountered. Although I learned plenty from them about powerful tools, what I took away as a part of me was their reasons for loving tech. A desire to reduce traffic accidents in D.C.; a burning passion to help former inmates re–enter society; an urgent need for police accountability in minority neighborhoods. The following year, I ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 28. Tuba City Boarding School Case Study The Tuba City mission trip will be focused on serving in the Tuba City Boarding School. According to the school's website, the boarding school has "55 General Education classrooms, 2 Gifted and Talented classrooms, 5 Native American Education classrooms, and 6 large Computer Labs serving approximately 1200 Pre–Kindergarten through Eighth grade students" (TBHS). The school was established in 1898 and was located in Blue Canyon. Since its creation, it has moved several times until it was established in Tuba City, where it has stayed since 1901 (TBHS). It has grown over the years, and now serves both Navajo and Hopi children. The mission statement for the school is "At Tuba City Boarding School, children are first, important, unique, responsible, and nurtured. Opportunities are provided for positive, life–long learning, healthy growth, success, and self–worth. A quality education is supported in a safe and culturally competent environment. Parents, community and school, together, educating the whole child for life" (TBHS). The first part of the mission statement focuses on the children. The Tuba City Boarding School wants to be a safe place for the children to learn and grow. The children are the focus of the school. I think that this is important because the school includes two different tribes, which sometimes do not get along with ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The first is the shattered relationship between the United States and the Native Americans. The main goal for our trip is to be respectful and understanding that some of the people on the reservation may not like us being there. We have to help foster a better relationship with the Native Americans. Ms. Hardie has stated that it is important that we act appropriately because the university has become close to the school as well as the reservation, and it will be difficult to rebuild the relationship if it is ever ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 29. Gunther Schuller's Music For Brass Ensemble In the second movement of his Music for Brass Quintet, Gunther Schuller utilizes unique articulations, rhythmic variance, and different combinations of mutes resulting in tension built from the swiftly changing textures. Throughout the movement Schuller takes advantage of brass instruments ability to double and triple tongue quickly. As seen in measure 3, he sets up thetrumpet, horn, and trombone to tongue at different speeds while raising in dynamic. Due to the similar timbre of these instruments, the result is an unstable homophonic texture that sounds aggressive. Schuller then has the instruments jump down to a piano dynamic. This decision is risky, due to the fact that all of the instruments are entering, and that it will be difficult... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The first instance is in measure 46, where all but the horn removes their mutes. While it would be assumed that the only muted voice would be the foreground of the section, the opposite is presented here. The horn continues the ostinato figure from the previous figure. Overall this allows for the rest of the ensemble to act as the solo voices collectively, and allows the rhythmic variance they have against the horn to stand out. In measure 68 we see the opposite combination used, where everyone is muted except for the tuba. This was likely done so that the tuba would have a distinct difference in color comparatively. This is necessary for its melodic line to cut through the ensemble. The end of the piece features the only change in the muted horn in the movement. In measure 73 Schuller marks the horn to play half muted. This technique results in a hold unstable sound, perfect for summing up the themes of the movement. In Gunther Schuller's second movement of his Music for Brass Quintet, he utilizes brass instruments' range, articulations, and muting abilities to create an unstable rhythmically complex piece that still carries a melodic ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 30. How Have Brass Instruments Changed Over Time How have brass instruments have changed over time? Trumpets, French horns, trombones, and tubas are the four main instruments in the brass family. Each has changed dramatically and will continue to change. Brass instrument come in all varieties. All brass instruments are curved and twisted to allow for easier holding as well as playing. Brass instruments range in size from about six–and–a–half feet to 18 feet, normally. There have beens some brass instruments invented that use nearly 60 feet of tubing. Trumpets are the smallest horns in size, when stretched out it is about six–and–a–half feet long. Trumpets can play some of the highest pitches, and has an impressive range of three octaves. Trumpets have had a great deal of uses throughout... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The French horn is roughly 18 feet long, but it only looks like about seven or eight feet long. The reason for the size distortion is the French horns shape. French horns have three full rings that connect the mouthpiece and the bell. Located between the mouthpiece and the bell are the three, sometimes four, valves and the tubing that belongs with each separate valve. French horns can be made with three or four valves. Horns with three valves are most commonly played in the key of F, while four valved horns can be played in the key of either F or Bb. The fourth valve allows the performer to switch between F and Bb. The beginning French horns had no valves. The performer could only change their pitch through one of two ways. The performer could switch the slide that determined the key of the horn, or they would just have to lip up the note. The French horn is the hardest brass instrument to play due to the overtone series. The overtones on the French horn are really close together, and it is hard to hit the right partial, especially while jumping. The overtone series, sometimes called the harmonic series starts low and spread out, but as it gets higher and higher, the notes get closer and closer to each other, making it difficult to find the right ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 31. Essay on Osmosis Investigation Osmosis Investigation How different concentrations of sucrose solution effect potato tissue. Aim How do different concentrations of sucrose solution effect potato tissue. Background Information Osmosis is the movement of water molecules though a partially permeable membrane from an area of high water potential to an area of low water potential. High Concentration Low Concentration The membrane lets small water molecules pass though but not large ones. The flow continues until the concentration becomes the same on the inside as on the outside. This is called equilibrium. Molarity is a measure of concentration. Prediction I predict that the potato will change in mass and in length. I believe this ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... 7. I swiftly put 3 potato chips into each test tube and then started my stopwatch. 3 chips were used to create an average which gave me a better set of results and more accurate graphs.
  • 32. 8. Whilst waiting I set out some paper towels with which I was going to dry the tuba. 9. After 15 minutes I drained out the solutions in the sink and placed all the tubas on the paper towel in the order. I wrote on these towels which molar they came from and the test number. 10. I dried each chip with the paper towel and then placed each one on the scales so that I could weigh them. 11. Each potato was measured accurately on the electronic scales and then the weights were recorded. 12. When completing all the concentration I had got 3 results per concentration, I took an average of this result. 13. I then worked out the average % change in mass. Conclusion This graph shows the line of best fit for the percentage change in mass of the potato tubers over the course of the fifteen minute experiment. The graph is a straight line that slopes upwards and does not go through the origin. Because the line is not very steep, I cannot say there is a strong relationship between the mass and concentration. However, there is a pattern on my graph, and this is, as the concentration of the solution increases, the percentage change in mass increases. The graph shows that the percentage gain and loss in directly ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 33. Personal Narrative: Jury Failure I couldn't believe it, but I knew that deep down I expected it. I knew I didn't pass my jury the moment I saw Mary's face when I asked to see my score sheets. On each of those goldenrod colored pieces of paper, the phrase Jury Failed: Recommended additional semester of study was checked off. My eyes quickly took in each of those scores; 67, 69, 62, 70. I knew that I was going to end my fall semester with a D in my tuba lessons. How pathetic was that? A D in tuba lessons. I held back the tears that threatened to flow as I gave the sheets back to Mary to be filed forever in my portfolio. Immediately after, I had to head back downstairs and take a Aural Skills sight–reading final. As if I would be able to focus on anything with this bombshell dropped on me. I didn't allow myself to cry until I had finally gotten back to my dorm.... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... A complete and utter failure. If I couldn't even pass my jury, how was I supposed to be a good music teacher one day? How could I expect myself to guide any and all band students I would potentially have? I started panicking over so much. What would my colleagues think of me? I was probably a joke to them now. What would my parents think? Probably that paying for me to major in music was a waste of money. What would my professor think? Well, he already knew considering he was there and checked one of those stupid Jury Failed: Recommended additional semester of study ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 34. The Aspects Of Roman Life Regarding Music The feelings that the Ancient Romans had towards music could be described as ambivalent. They admired it and at the same time, they condemned it. Music, nevertheless, played a role in Roman society that, as time passed, became less and less important to the Romans. As a result, much of the information about music in Ancient Rome has been lost in time. However what has been discovered about this topic is quite fascinating, in spite of what it is lacking. The subsequent paragraphs will explain some of the aspects of Roman life regarding music. This includes the history of music in Ancient Rome, the instruments that the Romans played, the uses of music in their society and the impact that music in Rome has had on the music of today. The Romans were not the most innovative of ancient cultures when it came to music, as it wasn't held to the same importance in Rome as it was in other cultures. Regardless, the Romans did very much enjoy music and admire its use in other cultures. And so, instead of creating a Roman version of music, they borrowed the musical instruments and musical theory from those other cultures. One of them was Etruscans. Though the fact that the Etruscans had an impact on music in Rome is known, the magnitude of that impact is unknown, but instruments used in Roman life such as the tuba and the cornu are believed to have been borrowed from the Etruscans. However, it was the Greeks that had the greatest influence on Roman music. A multitude of instruments used ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 35. Music Analysis: Salve Marte By John Stevens Salve Venere, Salve Marte by John Stevens John Stevens (b. 1951) is an internationally renowned composer for his brass music, including settings such as solo tuba, euphonium and trombone, tuba/euphonium ensemble, brass quintet and other brass chamber combinations. Many of his pieces in those respected ensemble settings have become standard in the repertoire, and are used in many competitions due to their technical requirements and their complex musical interpretations. He recently retired as Professor of tuba/euphonium at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, but still remains an active musician in the Wisconsin Brass Quintet and other musical activities. Salve Venere, Salve Marte is a contemporary and complex unaccompanied piece for solo tuba.... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The story is about a Kentucky coal miner that "...just about owes his soul to the company store." The miner works for years and goes forever without being paid "one red cent" in "..real honest–to–goodness money". However, he can always go to the company store where he could spend his scrip (little brass coins given to employees to charge to their accounts when they needed things). Being that it wasn't actual money, the miner always felt like he was in debt to company store and the only way he could attempt to pay it back was to keep on loadin' 16 tons of coal a day. – This toe–tapping ragtime arrangement by Ingo Luis is energetic and fun, and incorporates glissandos and smooth bass lines ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 36. Tuba Section Leader Report I'm the tuba section leader in the Pride of Broken Arrow (my high school marching band) for my junior and senior year and i'm also a leading and active member at my church, especially in the youth group. Doing those things are very important to me because they gave me some leading experience early on in my adulthood that many people don't get until college or after they start working. Being the Tuba Section leader for two years has been very beneficial to me because I learned leadership skills that a majority people don't learn till they're in college or even later. Being in the Pride of Broken Arrow has taught me that good leaders lead by example. Before I was the section leader the section leader we had was Carter, he was not a good ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 37. Marching Band Application Essay A primary characteristics that defines who I am as an individual is my musical interests and abilities. I grew up in a house that has been massively influenced by the art of music. My family has celebrated it for generations. My parents tell me stories about concerts that they and my extended family went to when they were younger. They saw shows like the Beatles, the Grateful Dead, Bruce Springsteen, the Clash, Steve Earle, U2, Van Morrison, etc. They took me to several of these concerts when I was very young. One of my most memorable experiences was at a Patti Smith concert when I was 2 years old where I pumped my fist at a song that I did not understand. These days, my family has settled down to focus more on me and my brother's future, but every few months there is a special occasion where we would go see something new and refreshing. As a Bender, I absorbed a great deal of knowledge as well as a unique musical taste. I knew I wanted to become a part of music by learning how to play a musical instrument. I was not sure how I would become a musician or what instrument I would learn to ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... Marching Band exposed a whole new level of musicality. I learned to play louder, stronger, and quicker. My dynamics and articulations improved. Even my physicality stabilized through the intensive marching exercises. Marching Band also opened up a new community that I could call Home. It was a great transition from Middle School to High School. I had a group of friends that I accepted me as one of their own. As the Marching seasons went by, I constantly improved my skills, and by my junior year, I was the section leader for the Sousaphones. In concert band, I continued my efforts to improve my skills. I joined the symphonic winds in my sophomore year and became first chair by the end of the year. I was a part of the elite Symphonic Orchestra and I applied for District Honor Band. I even joined the Jazz Band where I learned how to play the ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 38. Leonard Falcone International Euphonium And Tuba Festival... The Leonard Falcone International Euphonium and Tuba Festival first began as a summer euphonium competition that worked in conjunction with the Blue Lake Fine Arts Camp in Twin Lakes, Michigan. Its creation was planned by Fritz Stansell, Seymour Okun, Henry Nelson, and Eldon Rosegart as a palpable permanent way to honor the memory of Dr. Leonard Falcone, a famous euphonium player and teacher who served on faculty at Michigan State University for 53 years. Its original primary objectives have been altered to include "and the tuba" since its instatement, however, currently the objectives include: "...promoting the highest level of artistry on the euphonium and tuba; encouraging young musicians to study the euphonium and tuba; enhancing the repertoire for the euphonium and tuba by commissioning and encouraging original compositions, transcriptions, and arrangements; presenting master classes and performances by distinguished euphonium and tuba artists; and fostering increased awareness and appreciation for euphonium and tuba by the general public."1 ... Show more content on Helpwriting.net ... The Euphonium Artist cash prizes included a $1000 plus a performance with the Blue Lake Festival Band for first place, $500 for second place, and $200 for third place. The Euphonium Student cash prizes included $300 for first place, and $150 for second place.1 The initial board members along with their colleagues and students, helped publicize and fundraise for the festival. However, it was the support of Blue Lake Fine Arts Camp and a small executive committee including Donald Flickinger that kept the Festival alive during its first years. Important voluntary logistical operations were also offered by Jim and Bill Gray, who in later years would later leave the festival to establish the Brass Band of Battle ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 39. The Symphony Orchestra At The Usf Concert Hall On the afternoon of November 23rd, there was a performance by the USF Symphony Orchestra at the USF Concert Hall. Their performance, which was masterful from beginning to end, featured guest artists Jay Hunsberger on the tuba and Dolly Roberts on the harp. The performance began with Fanfare for the Common Man by Aaron Copland, a piece that started with a bang. The pang of a gong, and the beat of the drums, immediately captured and captivated the audience from the start. The slow build that led up to the trumpets and other brass instruments folding in, possessed an almost militaristic feel. Upon looking into the composer, it was no wonder why the triumphant sounds produced by the brass instruments came off as militaristic. Copland composed the piece during World War II. According to Elizabeth Bergman Crist, Copland: " . . . committed himself to creating music at once unabashedly modern he committed himself to creating music at once unabashedly modern and identifiably American. The 'desire to be American was symptomatic of the period,' he wrote in a later reminiscence. He recalled being 'anxious to write a work that would immediately be recognized as American in character' and so turned to jazz as 'an easy way to be American in musical terms.' " ("Music for the Common Man: Aaron Copland During the Depression and War," p. 3). It is obvious that Copland accomplished his goal of creating "American" music. Fanfare for the Common Man is an iconic piece, often played in movies ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...
  • 40. Who Is John's Character Benjamin Kats Mrs. S English 8 2 May 2017 John is a very quiet, and shy person. He would probably be described as an awkward character. He doesn't have a lot of friends. John is just a kid in high school, who gets abused by his stepfather, and is trying to really hard to get by in life. John talks to others mostly, "inside of his head." In most of the book, he is always in his thoughts. When he talks to his algebra teacher, he refers to her as "Mrs. Moonface," describing her appearance. "You Don't know me and you will never". John is alone and has not very much or even a lot of friends. He talks to himself and starts about his thoughts in his head as if anybody else would. John finds someone that he likes, Gloria "Hallelujah, "as he says ... Get more on HelpWriting.net ...