Does anybody know where is some kind of list of pieces for horn, tuba, and piano? I have a willing and able horn player, could likely hire a pianist, and would like to find out what is out there that is in my "possibly we could hack through this for fun" range.
Re: Literature
Posted: Wed Oct 18, 2023 5:25 pm
by DonO.
Man, the Robert King catalog used to be Da Bomb for stuff like this! How I miss it!
That said, it looks like the most likely contender for the One Place That Carries All Brass Music seems to be Hickey’s Music Center. What you’re looking for is in the section of the web site called “brass duos with piano”. Unfortunately you have to wade through all the trumpet and trombone, etc, duets to find the horn and tuba stuff.
Mary Ann wrote: ↑Wed Oct 18, 2023 5:11 pm
Does anybody know where is some kind of list of pieces for horn, tuba, and piano? I have a willing and able horn player, could likely hire a pianist, and would like to find out what is out there that is in my "possibly we could hack through this for fun" range.
If you add trombone, John Stevens’ “triangles” is a fun piece.
Barbara York’s Suite for Euphonium, Tuba, and Piano also has a version that subs Horn for Euph.
That was what inspired me in the first place, but I'd need to see the music to find out if I am dreaming about that one. To my surprise I am still steadily improving, due to both the brass band and the TE quartet being challenging, but still get frustrated when I come to a faster passage (sight reading) and the fingerings just don't rise out of the memory banks fast enough. Better than it was just a few months ago though. We were reading through St James Infirmary tonight and I couldn't keep up with the pitches I saw on the page. We've gotten pretty good now at the middle one in that collection, Royal Garden Blues, so I have hopes that I'll not be yelling SH!T in the middle of SJI the next time we read it.
Where can I get a look at the tuba part for the Wilder one? I expect it is costly and I'd be quite disappointed if I bought it and found it beyond me.
Mary Ann wrote: ↑Wed Oct 18, 2023 5:11 pm
Does anybody know where is some kind of list of pieces for horn, tuba, and piano? I have a willing and able horn player, could likely hire a pianist, and would like to find out what is out there that is in my "possibly we could hack through this for fun" range.
If you add trombone, John Stevens’ “triangles” is a fun piece.
Barbara York’s Suite for Euphonium, Tuba, and Piano also has a version that subs Horn for Euph.
The middle movement of the York is quite nice and I'll see how my horn player feels about it. I think we could do it.
The Stevens is also quite nice, and I think I have a euphonium player who would be tickled to play the tbone part.
Interesting that the Wilder doesn't attract me that much. I could probably manage the middle movement.
Thank you!
Re: Literature
Posted: Thu Oct 19, 2023 9:42 am
by bloke
Wilder wrote a couple of those suites, but the second one is sort of a mediocre copycat of the first one.
I couldn't imagine playing both of them on the same recital, unless I wanted to look out at the patrons' faces and see a whole bunch of raised eyebrows, eyes looking upward and off to the side, and to receive particularly tepid applause after finishing the second one.
My brother attended that recital (the linked video) and told me right afterward that he thought Suite #1 sucks. (I suspect he's one of those people that probably doesn't particularly like anything beyond Brahm's, but whatever... To my ears, we played it okay...??) I think that ending the entire Suite with the Hendrix "Foxy Lady" sharp-nine chord is sort of cool...ie. a conflicted tonic.
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Art Frackenpohl wrote a multi-movement tuba/horn piece with no piano - and with an alternate part transposed for baritone horn, but all you should expect is ...well... Frackenpohl.
I suppose - for a college composer - he's better than most.
Re: Literature
Posted: Thu Oct 19, 2023 7:19 pm
by russiantuba
Tony Plog wrote a piece for tuba, horn, and Piano that is really nice
Re: Literature
Posted: Thu Oct 19, 2023 9:51 pm
by djwpe
Mary Ann wrote: ↑Wed Oct 18, 2023 11:29 pm
The middle movement of the York is quite nice and I'll see how my horn player feels about it. I think we could do it.
The Stevens is also quite nice, and I think I have a euphonium player who would be tickled to play the tbone part.
Interesting that the Wilder doesn't attract me that much. I could probably manage the middle movement.
Thank you!
The Tango of the York is definitely my favorite, but the third movement is quite moving as well. If you can find it, the recording of Matt Brown and Jason Hamm (ironically neither of whom plays anymore) is great.
Re: Literature
Posted: Thu Oct 19, 2023 11:06 pm
by bloke
Mary Ann wrote: ↑Wed Oct 18, 2023 11:16 pm
Where can I get a look at the tuba part for the Wilder one? I expect it is costly and I'd be quite disappointed if I bought it and found it beyond me.
I'm sure you know someone in academia who can borrow it for you through interlibrary loan.
Re: Literature
Posted: Fri Oct 20, 2023 7:57 am
by bloke
This is surely the first recording of that first Wilder trio. These were his buddies in New York. The playing style is different.
Re: Literature
Posted: Fri Oct 20, 2023 9:53 am
by Finetales
I actually wrote a piece for horn/tuba/piano last year, commissioned by a friend. It's jazzish throughout. I'll see if I can track down a recording of one of the performances.