Originally posted by Dave2002
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Composer query - Britten
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostUm, Dave, you have already checked with two professional composers who have given the same answer. How much "further" do you want to go?
Being an orchestral viola player and having to sight read around the stave would be a serious pain.
Surprised no one’s mentioned cello tenor clefs ..
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With the cello there's also the conflict between writing in the treble clef at concert pitch and, an old convention, writing an octave higher. The tenor clef avoids this ambiguity. Even so, some composers discovered that the cello can indeed go above the treble clef at concert pitch. There's an example in the first movement of Elgar 1, about a minute into the d minor section after the opening (about 4 minutes into the movement depending on the tempo; sorry, I don' t have a score). And since we began with Britten, he takes the cellos well up into the treble clef in the 'Storm' from 'Peter Grimes'.
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Originally posted by RichardB View PostUm, Dave, you have already checked with two professional composers who have given the same answer. How much "further" do you want to go?
Is there some other factor which I'm missing here?
In the case of the cello sometimes parts go up in to the tenor clef, so maybe there are issues of range which make that appropriate - but do the same kind of issues apply to violas?
Cellos can have a range of over four octaves in the hands of a professional player, and similarly violins. Possibly violas don't have such a wide range for practical or physical reasons.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostNo they haven't, and the responses don't really make sense - to me at least. The fewer leger lines argument only works if the clef used is literally the treble clef, but if the 8va bassa clef notation is used then I doubt that the leger line issue is significant at all. I agree about switching between bass and treble clef, but there's surely no need to do that.
Is there some other factor which I'm missing here?
In the case of the cello sometimes parts go up in to the tenor clef, so maybe there are issues of range which make that appropriate - but do the same kind of issues apply to violas?
Cellos can have a range of over four octaves in the hands of a professional player, and similarly violins. Possibly violas don't have such a wide range for practical or physical reasons.
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Originally posted by ahinton View PostThe piano has been mentioned here and, as it is no problem for pianists to contend with reading material where five or more ledger lines may be required, it could perhaps be argued that writing for viola in treble clef would equally present no problem; however, the piano's range is vast compared to that of the viola and, as so much viola writing lies between is open C and, say, an octave above its open A, I really do see the point of writing for viola in alto clef except where sufficient material is at a pitch sufficently high to warrant a change of clef to treble.
Look at this about 12 minutes 12 seconds in, and in other places.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostNo they haven't, and the responses don't really make sense - to me at least. The fewer leger lines argument only works if the clef used is literally the treble clef, but if the 8va bassa clef notation is used then I doubt that the leger line issue is significant at all. I agree about switching between bass and treble clef, but there's surely no need to do that.
Is there some other factor which I'm missing here?
In the case of the cello sometimes parts go up in to the tenor clef, so maybe there are issues of range which make that appropriate - but do the same kind of issues apply to violas?
Cellos can have a range of over four octaves in the hands of a professional player, and similarly violins. Possibly violas don't have such a wide range for practical or physical reasons.
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