Initially I’d planned on watching only selected portions of this talk but it was so interesting, educational and well-presented that I wound up watching it in its entirety. Well done!
Thanks. Please share the videos with others. There is another one of Rich Ita I have yet to post where he talks about repairs and shows examples of his restoration work with before and after pictures. One cornet literally went through being crushed in a trash compactor.
I’m glad you enjoyed it. Please share with others. I have another year of my conferences to post and another cool one of Rich Ita about repairs and maintenance and restoration that was also very interesting.
In re the Flügelhorn: "Flügel" is German for "wing." I understand that the original, pre-Saxhorn version of the Flügelhorn was played at the "wings," i.e. the outer flanks, of a marching military band. As to the Saxhorn version of the Flügelhorn, which has a secondary role in the British brass band, and your mention of the "vulgar" status of brass band instruments: I once read that one of Vaughan Williams' symphonies features a Flügelhorn solo, of which a newspaper critic wrote of the première "at one point, a nasty noise was heard above the orchestra."
Great presetation! (Weidinger was later - performed Haydn and Hummel trumpet concertos on keyed trumpet. Brandenburg 2 could have been played by Gottfried Reiche - who is pictured on the Hausman painting with a coiled trumpet. It was Crispian Steele-Perkins who played the slide trumpet.)
I met Crispian before when doing a tour in England with a couple recitals and masterclasses. My student David Bertie told me of his recital and we drove about an hour to a small country church and Crispian was awesome and we all talked afterwards. I posted some pictures on my FaceBook and it was one of my favorite concerts of my life and meeting him and hearing him talk and play was awesome. He’s a treasure too!
Glad you enjoyed it. I’m so excited I have all that video and Rich did such a great job with doing the presentation like I asked for. He is the only person I have work on my horns. There’s another awesome video I have to reconstruct from a crashed RAID array drive that I hope to now work on with my more powerful computer. The future presentation is about repairs and a complete restore of a beautiful corner that was smashed in a trash compactor in a trash truck. I’m waiting to get the higher resolution photos so it looks good in 4K with the video of Rich in 1080p. He is such a historian in a practical way. Love his work.
Awesome! Please share these with others and subscribe and hit the notifications bell. I have another entire year of brass conference videos to post including another by Rich Ita showing repairs and restorations. You might be interested in some of the free audio on my website where Claude Gordon talks about historical cornets and soloists. It was always my favorite part at the end of the week. The list of all the audio is on this page. www.purtle.com/claude-gordon-archives
Les. That’s a great idea! I will have to do that very soon. It’s easy to do. I will put them in the comments with the time codes as you can see now with the chapters.
Most of the Cornet's tonal quality is derived from the super deep V cup which created a super mellow almost voice like sound. The Trumpet uses a more shallow cup shaped mouthpiece usually with a narrow throat and fast back bore.
It could be an early NY Bach MPC, that blank and the older Schilke blanks from the '60's & early '70's were almost identical...so much so, you have to look REALLY close to differentiate between them
What’s that snooty trebly old-timey horn sound from the roaring twenties that could be coming out of the extremely pointy and narrow snout of a miniature fox?
You might be right. Be on the lookout for an upcoming book by my student David Bertie from England. The book is a supplement to Saint Jacome and has lots of backstory about many things including his work as a tester in England later for Besson. It will be published in September by Colin and qpress.
Due to copyright restrictions RUclips won’t let it play. I either had the option to mute that portion or not be monetized for the entire video. I don’t think I was even given the option to share revenue for that portion.
@kendrickpereira37 RUclips does that and sometimes there’s not a way to appeal it. On the Arturo Sandoval masterclass I posted RUclips claimed I posted an orchestral recording of Mahler’s 5th Symphony when Arturo merely played the opening few measures of the trumpet solo. I hope you enjoy all the videos and find them helpful for your practice and playing. Please tell others. My goal is for all the content I post here and on my website will remain after I die. Look at my site too. www.purtle.com
Initially I’d planned on watching only selected portions of this talk but it was so interesting, educational and well-presented that I wound up watching it in its entirety. Well done!
Thanks. Please share the videos with others. There is another one of Rich Ita I have yet to post where he talks about repairs and shows examples of his restoration work with before and after pictures. One cornet literally went through being crushed in a trash compactor.
Just wow, thank you!
Excellent presentation!!
I’m glad you enjoyed it. Please share with others. I have another year of my conferences to post and another cool one of Rich Ita about repairs and maintenance and restoration that was also very interesting.
Fascinating presentation, thank you!
Fantastic review. from a cornet and trumpet collector....
Thanks! Please share it with others. I have another batch of videos to post. Another will be of Rich too.
In re the Flügelhorn: "Flügel" is German for "wing." I understand that the original, pre-Saxhorn version of the Flügelhorn was played at the "wings," i.e. the outer flanks, of a marching military band.
As to the Saxhorn version of the Flügelhorn, which has a secondary role in the British brass band, and your mention of the "vulgar" status of brass band instruments: I once read that one of Vaughan Williams' symphonies features a Flügelhorn solo, of which a newspaper critic wrote of the première "at one point, a nasty noise was heard above the orchestra."
Thanks for the info and comment.
Great presetation! (Weidinger was later - performed Haydn and Hummel trumpet concertos on keyed trumpet. Brandenburg 2 could have been played by Gottfried Reiche - who is pictured on the Hausman painting with a coiled trumpet. It was Crispian Steele-Perkins who played the slide trumpet.)
I met Crispian before when doing a tour in England with a couple recitals and masterclasses. My student David Bertie told me of his recital and we drove about an hour to a small country church and Crispian was awesome and we all talked afterwards. I posted some pictures on my FaceBook and it was one of my favorite concerts of my life and meeting him and hearing him talk and play was awesome. He’s a treasure too!
@@JeffPurtleI played a baroque trumpet masterclass for him back in college.
Glad you enjoyed it. I’m so excited I have all that video and Rich did such a great job with doing the presentation like I asked for. He is the only person I have work on my horns. There’s another awesome video I have to reconstruct from a crashed RAID array drive that I hope to now work on with my more powerful computer. The future presentation is about repairs and a complete restore of a beautiful corner that was smashed in a trash compactor in a trash truck. I’m waiting to get the higher resolution photos so it looks good in 4K with the video of Rich in 1080p. He is such a historian in a practical way. Love his work.
Just a correction: 11:00 it’s Crispian Steele Perkins performing, not Barry Baugess as presented.
Thank you. I learned a lot.
Awesome! Please share these with others and subscribe and hit the notifications bell. I have another entire year of brass conference videos to post including another by Rich Ita showing repairs and restorations. You might be interested in some of the free audio on my website where Claude Gordon talks about historical cornets and soloists. It was always my favorite part at the end of the week. The list of all the audio is on this page. www.purtle.com/claude-gordon-archives
Hi Jeff. Great presentation. I couldn't hear the audience questions. Would it be possible to edit in some subtitles to give an idea of what was asked?
Les. That’s a great idea! I will have to do that very soon. It’s easy to do. I will put them in the comments with the time codes as you can see now with the chapters.
@@JeffPurtle Thanks Jeff. I passed this along to some of my trumpet playing friends.
Thaaank youuuu
Sonare is coming back?
Most of the Cornet's tonal quality is derived from the super deep V cup which created a super mellow almost voice like sound.
The Trumpet uses a more shallow cup shaped mouthpiece usually with a narrow throat and fast back bore.
I believe Rich mentions that in this video.
What year was this presentation?
This was from my 2010 brass conference. www.purtle.com/brass-conference
At 43 minutes you show the Bach cornet with a Schilke mouthpiece 😀
It could be an early NY Bach MPC, that blank and the older Schilke blanks from the '60's & early '70's were almost identical...so much so, you have to look REALLY close to differentiate between them
I was hypnotized by the epic dad cell phone belt holster.
Eric you must be very easily distracted, there are medications for that.
🙌👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
What’s that snooty trebly old-timey horn sound from the roaring twenties that could be coming out of the extremely pointy and narrow snout of a miniature fox?
I think the cornet Bach is holding is an F. Besson, Paris instrument he had when he came to the United States.
You might be right. Be on the lookout for an upcoming book by my student David Bertie from England. The book is a supplement to Saint Jacome and has lots of backstory about many things including his work as a tester in England later for Besson. It will be published in September by Colin and qpress.
What happened to the sound in Muskrat Ramble?
Due to copyright restrictions RUclips won’t let it play. I either had the option to mute that portion or not be monetized for the entire video. I don’t think I was even given the option to share revenue for that portion.
Oh dear, @@JeffPurtle! I see.
But, apart from that, it was a most interesting and informative presentation.
@kendrickpereira37 RUclips does that and sometimes there’s not a way to appeal it. On the Arturo Sandoval masterclass I posted RUclips claimed I posted an orchestral recording of Mahler’s 5th Symphony when Arturo merely played the opening few measures of the trumpet solo. I hope you enjoy all the videos and find them helpful for your practice and playing. Please tell others. My goal is for all the content I post here and on my website will remain after I die. Look at my site too. www.purtle.com