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Charles Colin Publications Arban-Bell Interpretations - Bell - Tuba/Trombone/Baritone - Book
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Author: William Bell
Format: Book
Instrumentation: Tuba, Trombone, and Baritone
William' Bell's Arban Interpretations is an updating of the Arban text to meet the challenges of modern brass playing. Revised for tuba, trombone, and baritone, this book covers all of the areas of the original Arban's with a modern twist. Below is the author's foreword. This huge 142 page book should be in the library of any serious low brass professional.
"This book is the culmination of a long-lived desire to revise existing bass clef Arban methods. I feel that the great value of the Arban lies in the wealth of material provided for technical study, especially those chapters dealing with dotted eighths and sixteenths, lip slurs, fingered slurs, chromatic triplets, the grupetto, the trill and mordente, grace notes, triple tonguing and double tonguing.
Some of our brass pedagogues complain of the monotony of the Arban exercises but how can we reach technical perfection without disciplined repetition? The Arban is dated in many respects but for development of technique it is still the brass player's musical bible. I have included the scale and arpeggio routine because this should comprise the first part of daily practice." - William Bell
Format: Book
Instrumentation: Tuba, Trombone, and Baritone
William' Bell's Arban Interpretations is an updating of the Arban text to meet the challenges of modern brass playing. Revised for tuba, trombone, and baritone, this book covers all of the areas of the original Arban's with a modern twist. Below is the author's foreword. This huge 142 page book should be in the library of any serious low brass professional.
"This book is the culmination of a long-lived desire to revise existing bass clef Arban methods. I feel that the great value of the Arban lies in the wealth of material provided for technical study, especially those chapters dealing with dotted eighths and sixteenths, lip slurs, fingered slurs, chromatic triplets, the grupetto, the trill and mordente, grace notes, triple tonguing and double tonguing.
Some of our brass pedagogues complain of the monotony of the Arban exercises but how can we reach technical perfection without disciplined repetition? The Arban is dated in many respects but for development of technique it is still the brass player's musical bible. I have included the scale and arpeggio routine because this should comprise the first part of daily practice." - William Bell
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