wind instruments Tag

Musicon / Musical education / Piano – The tone formation and production

Piano – The tone formation and production

Posted on the June 14th, 2009 under Musical education

In the intricacy of its mechanism the piano stands next to the organ. The farther removed from direct utterance we are the more difficult is it to speak the true language of music. The violin player and the singer, and in a less degree the performers upon some of the wind instruments, are obliged ::More

Musicon / Beethoven / Musical education / Serenades

Serenades

Posted on the June 7th, 2009 under Beethoven,Musical education

A form which is variously employed, for solo instruments, small combinations, and full orchestra (though seldom with the complete modern apparatus), is the Serenade. Historically, it is a contemporary of the old suites and the first symphonies, and like them it consists of a group of short ::More

Musicon / Musical education / Horns, Trumpets, Cornets

Horns, Trumpets, Cornets

Posted on the March 22nd, 2009 under Musical education

The French horn, as it is called in the orchestra, is the sweetest and mellowest of all the wind instruments. In Beethoven’s time it was but little else than the old hunting-horn, which, for the convenience of the mounted hunter, was arranged in spiral convolutions that it might be slipped ::More

Musicon / Musical education / Wagner / Strings remain the chief factor of the orchestra

Strings remain the chief factor of the orchestra

Posted on the March 5th, 2009 under Musical education,Wagner

In the hands of the latter-day Romantic composers, and with the help of the instrument-makers, who have marvellously increased the capacity of the wind instruments, and remedied the deficiencies which embarrassed the Classical writers, the orchestra has developed into an instrument such as never ::More

Musicon / Musical education / Chamber music represents pure thought, lofty imagination, and deep learning

Chamber music represents pure thought, lofty imagination, and deep learning

Posted on the February 23rd, 2009 under Musical education

Chamber music represents pure thought, lofty imagination, and deep learning. These attributes are encouraged by the idea of privacy which is inseparable from the form. Composers find it the finest field for the display of their talents because their own skill in creating is to be paired with ::More