Alain Rieder
Silver Member
I doubt itBut only one orchestral tradition….
I doubt itBut only one orchestral tradition….
I doubt it
Give me their phone numbers and I’ll call them.ask the principal percussionists of the Concertgebouw, Berlin Phil, Orchestre de Paris, Munich Phil, Moscow Phil, London Symphony, etc..
Give me their phone numbers and I’ll call them.
Uh oh. Did I just send the thread into another 4 pages?don't end with a question..please
I had the good fortune of taking a couple lessons with Arnie Lang, who had been a percussionist for the New York Philharmonic. I showed him some figures in a reading book that I had, and I asked him what the "correct sticking" was.I was told a Conductor does not care one hoot how the percussion section performs a figure
it's the result...that matters
List your teachers who claim this. We'll wait...But only one orchestral tradition….
Just out of curiosity, what is the question that still lacks an answer, or is still open for debate? I'm not trying to be sarcastic. I literally don't know.
The thread started because somebody asked what a "ruff" is. Between the original NARD list of 13 rudiments, and the various books that have been cited by Todd and others, it seems that the "what is a ruff" question was answered many posts ago.
Unless I somehow inferred the wrong conclusion from this thread so far, it seems that "ruff" is another word for "drag." It can be played "open" or "closed."
It also seems that a tiny minority of teachers and books over the years have used the term "3 stroke ruff" to refer to 3 single strokes, with an accent on the 3rd one...sorta like a truncated version of the 4 stroke ruff.
Is this a pretty good summary of the main takeaways?
There's always endless debate about this one thing, I don't know why. Including what to call them, and everything else. They're played differently by different players, and different communities, and for different purposes. People should just know who says what, and why, and if that's their only input on the topic, they can make up their own minds what to do with them.
This last exchange is some kind of strange originalist argument that the one correct way to play them is the one way(???) they were played in Europe 200 years ago-- without actually doing any research into it, and just assigning authority to any of the billion currently living Europeans able to comment on it.
There's always endless debate about this one thing, I don't know why. Including what to call them, and everything else. They're played differently by different players, and different communities, and for different purposes. People should just know who says what, and why, and if that's their only input on the topic, they can make up their own minds what to do with them.
This last exchange is some kind of strange originalist argument that the one correct way to play them is the one way(???) they were played in Europe 200 years ago-- without actually doing any research into it, and just assigning authority to any of the billion currently living Europeans able to comment on it.
List your teachers who claim this. We'll wait...
I mean, we already asked one, and he responded….It’s on you to find a counterexample, I feel like
No, it's up to you to explain why your highly strange birthright theory of rudimental correctness has any validity.
And Alain, a European, already gave a different answer right here. How is that possible?
where's buzz strokes in this ruff discussionthe only European rudimental tradition that uses buzz strokes
where's buzz strokes in this ruff discussion
Because the orchestral world is tiny, especially the European one. Conductors travel all over the world constantly, doing guest conducting gigs. also, Performance practice is often not what’s written on the page, especially in percussion. My hypothesis is that there is an accepted practice that is pan-European, because of how small the orchestral world is, and how much guest conducting goes on.
It’s a simple solution—-just email 10 or so head percussion teachers in Europe, and see what they say. I see no major flaw in that plan, at least as a good starting point to getting a final answer