I may never (other than a handful of movements) feel like I could play a bunch of these dance movements in a recital, but sight-reading them - and working on some of them - is strengthening my contrabass playing (as I'm playing them down an octave (on the huge Miraphone), and only occasionally playing some of the movements as written for cello (on the F tuba).
I'm also finding that my old "guitar ears" are waking back up...
I see a chord (arpeggiated) "up ahead" (next event/measure/whatever...) in the music, I hear the chord in my head, and I'm finding that I'm not having to "poke" (linearly) at the individual notes.
Just in case anyone is interested, it seems as though the Wenzinger edition is deemed the most reliable and the most free off goofs and wrong notes.
It's also the least edited.
I found a free PDF download of it, and I feel as though anyone with rudimentary searching skills can find it just as easily as did I.
bloke "I'm actually approaching getting the (relentless, in these dance movements - in this octave - "double low C" in the context of my musical range (rather than "a pitch that I can play").someone on their website wrote:The Wenzinger edition is based on the manuscript by the hand of Mary Magdalena Bach. His edition is the most honest edition since all markings not in the original manuscript are indicated as such: changed slurs are indicated with dashed lines, added dynamics are shown in parentheses, all corrected notes are footnoted.
Just fwiw...A rotary hybrid 6/4 B-flat tuba (with an American-style 6/4 bell and 21+mm bore rotary valves) requires much more energy(/precise timing/precision) to play than a 5/4 piston C tuba with a 19mm bore...and I'm really getting a kick out of it...still...