[TPIN] Acquiring Maynard taste...
Fraser Hutchinson
fraserh at comcast.net
Fri Feb 15 01:21:05 CST 2008
I seem to recall from my music history classes that there was a long lost
technique of extreme high trumpet playing. It also strikes me that this was
in either the renaissance or baroque period, but I'm not sure about that.
The name escapes me at the moment, but I believe it started with a 'c'. It
was applied to the type of player.
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Fraser Hutchinson
fraserh at comcast.net
Trumpet, flugelhorn, keyboards, composer, arranger.
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-----Original Message-----
From: tpin-bounces+fraserh=comcast.net at tpin.okcu.edu
[mailto:tpin-bounces+fraserh=comcast.net at tpin.okcu.edu] On Behalf Of Dean
Betts
Sent: Thursday, February 14, 2008 11:56 PM
To: stevehyde615 at comcast.net; tpin at tpin.okcu.edu
Subject: Re: [TPIN] Acquiring Maynard taste...
Sorry, I mispoke, since I don't know a lot about trumpet history.
Was the trumpet originally intended to play triple C's, or even double A's?
> "Original range limits"? Please explain.
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