tubanh84 wrote: ↑Mon Oct 26, 2020 8:51 am
This little phrase is one of my pet peeves.
The issue with it, I have always found, is that people don't get their tone centered until the last half of the C at the end of it. So most of the time it is a garbled mess. As a result, under "normal" circumstances, you have a series of badly articulated notes, half of which don't have any real pitch to latch onto, and it's over before the audience can figure out what was supposed to have happened.
To Joe's original point, pre-troll, if you do it his way, you can over-emphasize the F with a functional accent and then overemphasize the C to show the outline of the phrase, and you can probably get closer to producing the written page.
TO ME, what it really takes is a group of people who can produce a nice, easy, centered tone to play it with a very VERY slight accent on the F, drop a quarter of a dynamic to the G, and then a slight crescendo up to the C, which ends cleanly before the next group takes up the phrase.
But that's something very few groups can pull off well, and this piece is routinely played in high schools....
However, historically I have put a lot of focus on this phrase with my euphonium students who are prepping for college auditions in case it's asked. Because it can be a real mess and derail an otherwise good audition.
<UNtroll>
Another issue is that the C (with many B-flat instruments) is flat, thus degrading (whether-or-not players make an effort to push the C up in pitch) the clarity/resonance of that final pitch in the run even more.
Playing it as a staccato (remembering:
detached, from the
actual definition of "staccato", rather than "tut-sound")
quarter note (rather than incorrectly, as a detached eighth note) gives many players a "fighting chance" to "do something better" with that C. Realize that the
only thing from which the C needs to be "detached" is the run's penultimate B-flat, as the C is
only followed by a very long rest.
With most musical phrasing, "up-is-up, and down is down" (re: Tabuteau)...but there are
endless exceptions - with this (to my ears) being one phrase that should be on the endless list of exceptions. Singing the first complete phrase (and/or listening to some of the finest recordings) demonstrates this.
Here...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0yAmR-U3Hug...
...the tubas begin with a that's-pretty-good-for-tubas "tutty-tutty-TUT! (mixed in with a good measure of "blatty-blatty-BLAT!"), following by the woodwinds - executing per my editing in the original post. To some (many?) tuba players' ears (as there is a strong flavor of "manly!" and "workin' hard!" in the sound), this may sound "great", but (OK...) to a woodwind player's ears (such as one who might be sitting behind a screen in an audition committee), possibly/probably "not so much".
I'd wager that - were I coaching/conducting/directing a band (for a "contest" - as competing is a peculiar phenomenon in which wind bands involve themselves), and instructed my charges to execute this phrase in this way, the judge(s) would
not hear (seated "back up there") it as "wrong", but (assuming good execution) would
only hear it as "good".
</UNtroll>