Precisly, which instruments are them? cause it' s not written and I don' t know very much about the brass family. Are them two trumpets in Bb, a horn in f, a tuba and a basso tuba (both in c)?
At first glance I can say that this is written in a very strange way. Easy rhythm is written unnecessary hard. You lose the feeling of the beat. A musician does not like it written like this.
I really like this but i think the horn part should be written as a trombone part like later on because of the range. Or at least make it up the octave
Sear Donahue lmao idk what to tell you. It's the Pentatonix version literally just transcribed for brass. But also, 5 minutes isn't very long at all for a single piece of music when so many pieces are well over 15 minutes.
Hello Leandro! Would you mind sen me the arrangement? Here´s my email adress: marijotasoto@gmail.com in my school we have a band with sax, trumpet, trombone, clarinet, euphonium, tuba, we would like the arrangement to be able to interpret it Thankss!
it's a pain to play, when he gets the melody, he sings to high to play it comfortably, also thats what I like about his voice, its like mine, only if I could sing a bit higher, because I got the low ground covered but after I became a bass I couldn't be hired as a singer anymore because I dont have the bariton part of most music in my full voice, but I can at least do alto voices and bass II :L
Eredaane I'm so confused. You say you can't hit baritone notes because your voice doesn't go high enough, but then you later say you can hit alto. Alto is higher than baritone. It goes bass, baritone, tenor, alto, mezzo soprano, then soprano. So how are you hitting an alto when you supposedly can't hit a baritone or tenor.
The very first note of the entire piece, is wrong. The beginning of each phrase, in the "original" and in the pentatonix arrangement (I checked just to make sure) is the third to the fifth, in this case the first note of each phrase at least for the first few measures should be a concert D and you start each phrase with an Eb.
This arrangement has about 47 things wrong with it. The lyrics literally say "It goes like this, the fourth..." and the trumpet part doesn't follow the chord change to the 4.
I play in an orchestra, so I might be a little confused. Do the different instruments read the same clef differently? I was noticing A Bb pairings as well as D Eb pairings using classical reading. And why do the parts have different key signatures? Accidentals exist and it makes for a neater score
Yes, each instrument is in a different key, trumpet is in Bb, french horn is in F, and all of the low brass are in concert pitch. The different key signatures are a result of that, since the trumpet is is Bb there are no extra flats needed, since horn is in F you only have to add 1 flat since the key of F only has 1 flat. Trumpets and horn both read treble clef the same as in E G B D F but a D on trumpet is different than a concert D since the instruments are pitched differently. I could probably explain this better or with more detail if you need but this is the shortest and most basic way I could explain.
Yes. Trumpets play in the key of Bb, whereas horns play in the key of F. A C to a trumpet player is an F to a horn player and vice versa. If this were in a concert pitch format, there would be accidentals and a consistent key signature.
The concert key is B flat, so the low brass key signatures have two flats. Horn adds one sharp, or takes away one flat, so they’re reading in F (a perfect fifth up from concert B flat Major). B flat Trumpets add two sharps or take away two flats, so they read in C major (a major second above B flat) but it all is heard as B flat