Music Question
May. 19th, 2005 08:25 amSo when I call a tune in B-flat (for the horns), and the electric guitar player asks "What key is that for ME?" what do I tell him?
Is there a handy link to a chart of whatever this is about?
Is there a handy link to a chart of whatever this is about?
Um, B-flat?
Date: 2005-05-19 04:20 pm (UTC)Until I saw your second question, I assumed you wanted a good flip answer. The best serious answer (http://www.orchestralibrary.com/reftables/rang.html) to the second that I find is a little weak on identifying which of several choices is "normal" for modern players, and it would be especially nice if somebody put this information together with a transposition wheel, (http://www.gospelmusic.org.uk/resources/transposition_wheel_shock.htm) but maybe I'll have to put that on my own list of projects that never seem to get done.
One of the just-right little details I loved in Back to the Future was when Marty called a "blues in B," which really meant B-flat because why would horns ever play in sharp keys, until he broke out in his heavy metal solo and forgot and suddenly it was B-natural because why would a guitar band ever play in flat keys? Either some sharp-eyed production assistant had experience playing both jazz and rock--or else they brought in a second guitar double for the solo who never even heard what it was coming out of. Either way, the perfection of it made me laugh out loud in the dead silence that followed.
Re: Um, B-flat?
Date: 2005-05-19 04:37 pm (UTC)What clef do you read (if any)?
Date: 2005-05-19 05:31 pm (UTC)A-sitting on a gate
Date: 2005-05-20 01:04 am (UTC)