|
CLARINET BOOKS
Posted in Clarinet (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
Written by Gustave Langenus. By Carl Fischer Music.
Sells new for $18.95.
There are some available for $16.99.
Read more...
Purchase Information
1 comments about Complete Method for the Clarinet in Three Parts (Part 1).
- I own all three volumes of this work and have found it to be a good addition to my library. I have been taught from the book as a student and although it contains some very basic concepts the book was good for a reviewing and basically explaining concepts. This book I would not recommend for children as the entire book is studies. The fingering chart enclosed in the book is also one of the most detailed I have seen and I still refer to it today. I stopped playing seriously for 5 years and this was the first book I went back to for my revision, and it was exactly what I needed.
Read more...
Posted in Clarinet (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
Written by Various. By Schirmer Books.
The regular list price is $16.95.
Sells new for $12.10.
There are some available for $5.99.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Masterworks for Clarinet and Piano.
Posted in Clarinet (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
Written by J.B. Albert. By Carl Fischer, LLC.
Sells new for $9.50.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about 24 Varied Scales and Exercises for Clarinet.
Posted in Clarinet (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
Written by A. Marchese. By Ariel.
The regular list price is $18.85.
Sells new for $40.00.
There are some available for $47.48.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Diccionario de Retorica, Critica y Terminologia Literaria.
Posted in Clarinet (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
By Hal Leonard Corporation.
The regular list price is $14.95.
Sells new for $8.63.
There are some available for $7.48.
Read more...
Purchase Information
5 comments about Play Clarinet Today! - Level 1 (The Ultimate Self-Teaching Method).
- This is a good beginning book to learn the notes of the clarinet and has some basic exercises. But very soon, you will want to buy a book that has more complete exercises like scales, arpeggios and other patterns. I recommend the book to get started though.
- This is an excellent book for any beginner. It teaches you finger position, notes and basic exercises. You will have a lot of fun using the book with the CD. It is a relaxing, good self-instruction book.
- The trombone was my first instrument that I learned in school. I taught myself the recorder and later taught myself the trumpet. I happened upon a used clarinet and decided to learn it. I was able to play it by ear like a recorder, but I didn't know what fingerings go with which notes. That is why I bought the book. In my opinion the book is very good at teaching the basics. A child could not follow it through on their own, but the information is complete. The songs that are included are fun to play and get quite challenging by the end of the book. It is a pretty good beginner book.
- I've not played since I was in middle school, and thought I'd pick it up again. Seems I can't find a beginner's book that was like the one I had when I first learned how to play. So, I will look again for something a little more basic, but my kids are going to love it when I can play Queen's We Will Rock You.
- As I stated for Level 1 of this series, it is more for the fooling around player. The emphasis is on learning songs, rather than on time tested methodology of learning an instrument. It does not even cover all the notes in the Chalumeau register!
Read more...
Posted in Clarinet (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
Written by Eric Hoeprich. By Yale University Press.
The regular list price is $40.00.
Sells new for $26.00.
There are some available for $36.36.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about The Clarinet (Yale Musical Instrument Series).
Posted in Clarinet (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
Written by Johannes Brahms. By Dover Publications.
The regular list price is $19.95.
Sells new for $13.96.
There are some available for $11.52.
Read more...
Purchase Information
2 comments about Complete Chamber Music for Strings and Clarinet Quintet.
- This fat Dover edition is an excellent deal if you're playing any one of these pieces. I think they reprinted the Breitkopf and Hartel edition, so every marking should be legitimate. Definitely a key component of the chamber music score library. And like most Dover scores, it stays open easily if you set it down- it's bound in such a way that it won't close by itself all the time.
- Very interesting edition. Noteheads are large and well readable. The preface is very interesting, and lists some passages found in Brahms' autographs that were crossed out and rewritten (e.g. the beginning of the Clarinet Quintet). Hans Gal (the editor) made a great work in preparing this edition!
Read more...
Posted in Clarinet (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
Written by Nick Stone. By HarperCollins.
The regular list price is $24.95.
Sells new for $2.00.
There are some available for $0.96.
Read more...
Purchase Information
5 comments about Mr. Clarinet.
- I really enjoyed this debut novel. It's a little drawn out but I enjoyed the journey and I thought it had a very good ending. You learn a lot about the main character, Max Mingus, and yet are left wanting to know even more and I think that's a perfect way in which to end the first book of a new series. I will definitely be watching for the second book to come out. I would recommend it.
- How to see the world that is hidden.In this masterful terror thriller we step into the dark world that is Haiti.After the chaos of Baby Doc and the puppets that are hand picked by the US a frightening world emerges where the power of the Loas and the Bokar turn life into a zombie style existence in order that the people may "live".Mingus finds himself searching for the son of a privelged white family ,but what he finds is the nightmare world of child traders that exist to feed the sexual fantasies of the super rich.Brilliant terrifying and very thought provoking.I look forward to his next book with anticipation.
- MR CLARINET is a highly acclaimed thriller, that won both the CWA Ian Fleming Steel Dagger Award (for best adventure/thriller novel) and an International Thriller Award (for best debut novel of 2007). I think it's largely deserving of those awards.
The plot of MR CLARINET is straightforward. Max Mingus is a police detective who served seven years in prison for a vigilante killing. After being released, Mingus is offered a job by a rich man named Allain Carver. He is asked to find Carver's son Charlie, who disappeared three years ago on the island of Haiti. If he succeeds, he will get paid $10 million. Mingus then travels to Haiti, and learns the case is much more complicated than it seems.
Overall I thought MR CLARINET was well written. Nick Stone's writing style reminds me a lot of another UK author, John Connolly. Stone's the type of writer who takes a lot of time to set up the story, the main character's background, and the surrounding atmosphere. This is not what I would describe as a leanly written, fast-paced novel.
In MR CLARINET, Stone does a great job detailing the realities of Haitian society in the mid-1990s. Needless to say, it's not a great place to live. If you have a pre-existing interest in this region, this novel provides some fascinating insights into what daily life is like in the poorest country in the Western hemisphere. If you couldn't care less about Haiti, you might find all the detail to be tedious.
Personally, I though Stone paid a bit too much attention to the setting, and not enough time on developing the characters. Other than the anti-hero Max Mingus, I didn't feel most of the characters in this book had much depth. I also felt that the plotline was a bit too convoluted for my tastes, with one clever twist too many.
MR CLARINET is gritty to the extreme. This book has a ton of graphic violence and sexual content (of the non-erotic variety), and readers sensitive to such material should definitely stay away.
But in the end, I very much enjoyed MR CLARINET. The story was well told, and the writing of very impressive quality. This is the first book in a series, and I look forward to future installments.
- Author: Think I'll write a crime novel for my debut!
Agent: Okay but whatever you do try to be original! But don't ignore the tried and tested formula - make sure you stick with it.
Author: Oh don't worry; originality was at the forefront of my mind. In fact I've already done quite a bit of research.
Agent: Okay - I'm listening.
Author: Well, for a start the `hero' has to be tough, you know, a bit like Burke's Robicheaux and Connelly's Bosch.
Agent: Like it! And his wife must have died horribly a bit like John Connolly's Charlie Parker's! and, because of it, he has to be all haunted and bitter and twisted and vicious; a bit like Connelly's Bosch! And someone who can barely wait for his shot of Jack Daniels; a bit like Burke's Robicheaux!
Author: Wow, didn't think of that but great! He's got to be a big guy who despises villains and good with guns and things; a bit like Child's Jack Reacher!
Agent: We're onto something here! And he's got to be a brilliant investigator a bit like Deaver's Lincoln Rhyme!
Author: You read my mind! The villain must be a twisted, vicious, homicidal maniac whose lackeys look upon him as some sort of messiah, a bit like the twisted, vicious, messianic, homicidal maniac in Hecht's Babel!
Agent: That's it! And he's got to have a recognizable patch, a bit like Bosch's L.A., Parker's New England, Davenport's Minneapolis, Robicheax' New Iberia, Brunetti's Venice, Zen's Rome; Morse's Oxford.
Author: Blimey! Is there anywhere left?
Agent: er, how about, er, Haiti?
Author: Brilliant! Where is it?
Pause
Agent: Besides, isn't originality overvalued?
Author: Well, who'll notice anyway?
Agent: He's got to have a ridiculous name! You forgot the ridiculous name!
Author: No I didn't.
- I'll start with the bad things. 1) The prose is descriptive but artless, but there is a good point to it (see below).
2) There is an awful black guy-white guy buddy element that screams to Hollywood from the very HP LaserJet home printer the first draft was pounded out on. And the "twist" on the "black guy's" character is he is a Bruce Springsteen fan. Daaawwwwwgggg, where you cum up wid dis sheeah? Yep, it is that obvious a "Novel writing 101: Developing Interesting Characters" in vomitous transparency. 3) the evil guy is over-the-top evil with no redeeming qualities whatsoever and completely unsympathetic...purposefully so, which makes it kinda adolescent and Manichean. 4) the rich creepy guy is rich and creepy and evil too. Has it ever occurred to an author that someone who is rich might be kind, intelligent, holy, benevolent, and filled with gemutlichkeit? No. All rich people in pop novels are evil. Evil evil evil. Class warfare comrade! Novelists of the work unit! You have nothing to loose but your stupidity in perpetuating stereotypes! 4) the "tender" moments are about as brief as a ten-second "touching moment/double head-shot" in a movie script, and about as deep.
Happily, the good points overcome these weaknesses. There are funny metaphors throughout: horses pissing on wind chimes for a sound was my favourite.
The plot is excellent and the back story for the hero well thought out. Perhaps this is a strength and flaw, for the hero is so compellingly constructed that the other characters, other than his dead wife, are less interesting in comparison.
The excellent dual locations of Miami, and Haiti are fun, and there are unblinking passages about Haiti that recall overwhelming memories for anyone who has visited there.
Needless to say, the complex backdrop and intersection of the random and the supernatural and the rational world and voodoo make for arresting points and twists, although the supernatural is simultaneously a great motivating force for the characters, explicit supernatural events that could *ONLY* be supernatural are left intentionally and artfully ambiguous.
Detailed torture scenes are not for the squeamish. Please consider this a warning, as this does not happen "offstage" in the prose.
This is excellent pop literature that overcomes its flaws with tremendous and compelling thought. Certainly not the depth of erudition of Thomas Harris or Donna Tartt, but a compelling novel that touches on crime, procedural, and outsider cultures that shows tremendous promise. Highly recommended.
Read more...
Posted in Clarinet (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
Written by Avrahm Galper. By Mel Bay Publications, Inc..
The regular list price is $9.95.
Sells new for $4.66.
There are some available for $5.71.
Read more...
Purchase Information
No comments about Mel Bay Klezmer Book: 42 Klezmer Favorites for Clarinet and B-Flat Instruments.
Posted in Clarinet (Sunday, September 7, 2008)
Written by John Gibson. By JB Linear Music.
Sells new for $29.95.
Read more...
Purchase Information
1 comments about Advanced Intonation Technique for Clarinets.
- I have bought other tuning methods with CDs and this one goes further into what a clarinet player needs. I wish the written material could have been more detailed, though. It is clear and understandable, but I think it just hits the surface on some topics. The hints for clarinets were the best part. I like it that the CD used clarinet sounds. The exercises are first rate and cover a lot. Since I play bass clarinet, the exercises for the bass were a big help. Using a tuner pick-up with the exercises is a good suggestion the book makes. I have recommended it to my better students.
Read more...
|
|
|
Complete Method for the Clarinet in Three Parts (Part 1)
Masterworks for Clarinet and Piano
24 Varied Scales and Exercises for Clarinet
Diccionario de Retorica, Critica y Terminologia Literaria
Play Clarinet Today! - Level 1 (The Ultimate Self-Teaching Method)
The Clarinet (Yale Musical Instrument Series)
Complete Chamber Music for Strings and Clarinet Quintet
Mr. Clarinet
Mel Bay Klezmer Book: 42 Klezmer Favorites for Clarinet and B-Flat Instruments
Advanced Intonation Technique for Clarinets
|