BGuttman wrote: ↑Fri May 25, 2018 12:36 pm
I would guess that a small bore tenor would be appropriate. Howard Weiner published a paper in the old TTF where he explained that the three trombones in 19th Century playing were all Bb instruments of different bores: smallest for "alto", medium for "tenor", and large bore for "bass".
Sounds like a great experience. Enjoy the ride.
Howard's paper, aside from being still debated, is also much more nuanced than that, and he examines (and gets to different conclusions for) different times and places. Some places most definitely used actual altos, and a few definitely also used "real" basses in F or Eb. That is well documented.
I can't remember what that paper says about Leipzig and I don't have access to it right now. But there is certainly no question that at least some of the symphonies by Schumann, Brahms and Mendelssohn, for instance, call for a true bass, as they go beyond the range of the tenor. The first trombone range lies quite high and we also know that the Sattler (and later Penzel) workshop in Leipzig did make altos, several of which are still extant today. I find it hard to believe that nobody in Leipzig would have used them to perform those very high alto parts when they had the best trombone-making workshop in their town making them...
StefanHaller wrote: ↑Fri May 25, 2018 10:22 am
LeTromboniste wrote: ↑Fri May 25, 2018 9:41 amFor your first question, my answer is this : does it really matter?
No, it totally doesn't. It was really just curiosity, I should have mentioned that. I don't have an alto trombone anyway and I've never played one. I guess I was mainly curious how well that passage in the 2nd movement could be played on an Eb alto, with the jump from 2nd to 7th position in a run of sixteenth notes.
The tempo is quite slow though, so the fact that they are 16th note isn't really a problem in itself. The E is also the first of the sixteenth note, so you could conceivably shorten the D to be on the E in time if the distance was a problem. It's certainly not the easiest gesture to play on an Eb alto and it could be an argument supporting that the piece might have been written for tenor. But then again composers don't hesitate to write A-B on tenor sometimes, on a much longer slide, so... And let's face it, it's entirely possible (and likely) that Schumann didn't care about slide positions.