Closed voicing, open voicing, jazz harmony, music theory, Miles Davis, big band, soli, jazz chords, orchestration, miles ahead, stravinsky, bass clarinet
I love the bass clarinet! I played it the majority of my time in band, and it was my absolute favorite. It's tone and range was so much fun to play with.
@@Endiv_3maybe as you wrote, in high school band pieces always use the treble. But in a professional orchestral setting, the are pieces pieces like The Rite of the Spring, The Sorcerer Apprentice, Rachmaninoff Symphony 2, Prokofiev Symphony 5, Wagner operas etc. where we need to read bass clef as well
I love the bass clarinet! I played it the majority of my time in band, and it was my absolute favorite. It's tone and range was so much fun to play with.
Nice! Was it a symphonic wind band?
Go the bass clarinet!
😀
My nearly favorite bass instrument variant, second only to the bass trombone.
bass clarinet here ;D
goated - as well as THE contrabassoon
Haha true
i knew it was the rite of spring by the thumbnail
haha, well done!
typically, bass clarinet is written in treble clef, not bass clef.
Sure is. I tend to show examples in concert on my channel
@@gilevansinsideout I play bass clarinet for high school. I’ve never seen anything written in bass clef. It’s always treble
Oh maybe I wasn’t clear. I agree with you. 😀 sometimes when it’s written in concert on a score it can be in bass clef.
@@Endiv_3maybe as you wrote, in high school band pieces always use the treble. But in a professional orchestral setting, the are pieces pieces like The Rite of the Spring, The Sorcerer Apprentice, Rachmaninoff Symphony 2, Prokofiev Symphony 5, Wagner operas etc. where we need to read bass clef as well