Artie Wrote:Great post Nic, and I am much more of a fan of Orchestra versus a Band. I just feel having the strings is a key part to the overall sound.
To me, Western strings sound too dead. It's too clean and polished, but still provides a very good, more mellow and organic contrast to the brass.
Alice Wrote:I love the etudes - I have some wonderful arrangements of these performed using only the left hand. It's incredible! The performer is Marc-Andre Hamelin.
I didn't think that could even be possible O_______________o
Alice Wrote:Artie Wrote:Not sure what grade you mean.
I've been playing for about five years, and take weekly lessons from an orchestra member.
I play Class-A solos at times, if that helps lol.
Official grading that's acquired through teaching/studying and examinations. If you've taken any, you may just play more for leisure, I don't know.
I always thought ABRSM and Trinity was used in America as well. Locally, we have these two, and some grading systems from China (mainly for Chinese instruments).
In any case, having gone through this for several of my instruments, I don't really believe in these systems. I've seen too many cases of the person's skill not matching the "grade", so I feel that this grade only says whether you can play the song set for your exam, and nothing else.
Also, I personally think these exams are overly expensive. To be honest, I don't see much use for these gradings. After all, when you want to work in music, it's about your own playing, auditioning, etc., I've never heard of a case of getting a job based on your grading.
Still, they're useful as a set of recommended pieces you can try.
Roan Wrote:After the band plays for the three judges it then moves on to sight reading where two random pieces you've never seen before are put in front of you and you have 5 minutes to look over both pieces and then play them for a judge and a grade.
Is this... sightreading for a full band?