Boutry or Bitsch?
Posted: Mon Aug 08, 2022 4:02 pm
I am thinking about ordering one of these. Both are for advanced players and it looks like they cover the same ground.
Any advice?
Any advice?
My enjoyment of them might be Stockholm Syndrome related...... My teacher used them as sort of a bridge to expand the Rochut style towards the French books- he had a real progression of the Pichereau-Bitsch-Boutry-Bozza. So I think that slightly disnunct nature was maybe meant to help in context, though I kinda agree with you on them just being a bit...weird. But I definitely enjoy Bitsch and Boutry more than the others. Though the Bozza Graphic Studies book is actually pretty nice and much more friendly than the Caprices. It kinda hits a similar style point to the Boutry of trying to codify what people thought might become atonal standards and I'm a sucker for those kinda little historical moments that didn't catch on.Crazy4Tbone86 wrote: ↑Tue Aug 09, 2022 7:28 am
Interesting that Matt B. mentioned the Pichereau books. I never learned those as a student, so I decided to go through those while stuck at home during the pandemic. I don’t think I will use them with my students. While very good, I found that many of the etudes would suddenly change style, rhythmic content, etc…… in a way that made it difficult to tie the different sections of an etude together. Maybe Pichereau did that on purpose, but I found quite a few of the etudes a bit incohesive. I can see that as being rather tricky for a developing musician.
I have heard many people describe the Bitsch and Boutry etudes as “great books for advancing rhythmic skills.” While I agree that there are plenty of rhythmic challenges, I see both books as being a great blend of rhythm, intervals, articulations, phrasing, etc…. If a student is looking to really focus on rhythmic skills, the Blazhevich Sequences is my recommendation.
I actually enjoy the Pichereau very much! I think there are some very lovely passages in those etudes. Gerard Pichereau, with all of his teaching experience at the Conservatoire de Paris, certainly understood the trombone and how to write for it. It is just those sudden changes of direction within some of the etudes that make them strangely unique. Possibly Jim DeSano liked them because he wanted students to just play what was on the page and learn to shift gears quickly......certainly an invaluable skill!mbarbier wrote: ↑Tue Aug 09, 2022 8:36 amMy enjoyment of them might be Stockholm Syndrome related...... My teacher used them as sort of a bridge to expand the Rochut style towards the French books- he had a real progression of the Pichereau-Bitsch-Boutry-Bozza. So I think that slightly disnunct nature was maybe meant to help in context, though I kinda agree with you on them just being a bit...weird. But I definitely enjoy Bitsch and Boutry more than the others. Though the Bozza Graphic Studies book is actually pretty nice and much more friendly than the Caprices. It kinda hits a similar style point to the Boutry of trying to codify what people thought might become atonal standards and I'm a sucker for those kinda little historical moments that didn't catch on.Crazy4Tbone86 wrote: ↑Tue Aug 09, 2022 7:28 am
Interesting that Matt B. mentioned the Pichereau books. I never learned those as a student, so I decided to go through those while stuck at home during the pandemic. I don’t think I will use them with my students. While very good, I found that many of the etudes would suddenly change style, rhythmic content, etc…… in a way that made it difficult to tie the different sections of an etude together. Maybe Pichereau did that on purpose, but I found quite a few of the etudes a bit incohesive. I can see that as being rather tricky for a developing musician.
I have heard many people describe the Bitsch and Boutry etudes as “great books for advancing rhythmic skills.” While I agree that there are plenty of rhythmic challenges, I see both books as being a great blend of rhythm, intervals, articulations, phrasing, etc…. If a student is looking to really focus on rhythmic skills, the Blazhevich Sequences is my recommendation.
Totally agree on the Blazhevich Sequences. Isn't that the one that Mulchay did the edition of for the new books? I really like that edition
Totally agree- they're super well written and I found that kind of direction change really helpful in getting ready for Bitsch and Boutry. I still quite enjoy playing/teaching the recreative studies. I recently came across his legato book, which I've not used a lot, but it's pretty nice too.Crazy4Tbone86 wrote: ↑Tue Aug 09, 2022 2:07 pm
I actually enjoy the Pichereau very much! I think there are some very lovely passages in those etudes. Gerard Pichereau, with all of his teaching experience at the Conservatoire de Paris, certainly understood the trombone and how to write for it. It is just those sudden changes of direction within some of the etudes that make them strangely unique. Possibly Jim DeSano liked them because he wanted students to just play what was on the page and learn to shift gears quickly......certainly an invaluable skill!
I still have my old Carl Fischer Edition of the Blazhevich Sequences from about 1980. Even though it was a horrible publication (tons of wrong pitches, awkward page turns, and I had to buy a separate Part 1 and Part 2), they hold some sentimental value because I thought they were fantastic training. The modern edition by East-West Music International is much better and yes, Michael Mulcahy was part of the editing team on that. The East-West Music International edition is what I have my students buy for both the Sequences and the "Clef Studies" by Blazhevich.