
Freudian Slip
New member
Cool chart southSide Glen.
I have considered something very close to that. During my research I came across a page that allows one to roughly chart their own ear/monitoring chain combined response curve via the playback of sine wave tones. I thought that might be a neat thing to include.masteringhouse said:In version 2.0 it might be nice to re-create this in Flash and actually hear a sine wave corresponding with the frequencies as you rollover the various regions, or be able to play the note on the keyboard if you click on it.
SouthSIDE Glen said:Are you referring to a 5-string bass? If so, maybe I should specify it on the chart as a 4-string bass and add extra info for the 5-string in the detail info cell?
I'd like feedback from all the bass players out there on this one.
SonicAlbert said:Maybe you could indicate these possible lower notes on the bass by using the same black bar that you used for the low range of the tuba and french horn.
ö = Alt+0246RAK said:Like a Boesendorfer.
Okay, so I just wanted to say Boesendorfer.
Anyone know where the umlat is on this thing?
RAK said:The misplaced apostrophe is definetly a plague on our society.
This falls into that category that I was talking about earlier where if I were to list every variation of every instrument I'd wind up with either an instrument chart as tall as an NBA basketball playerSonicAlbert said:Maybe you could indicate these possible lower notes on the bass by using the same black bar that you used for the low range of the tuba and french horn.
And, if I'm not mistaken, you have to use the numeric keypad and not the numbers across the top of the QUERTY (or has that changed?). Also, the zeros are necessary.MadAudio said:ö = Alt+0246
ë = Alt+0235
ä = Alt+0228
ü = Alt+0252
ï = Alt+0239
D'OH!! That plague is one of my pet peeves, and one I am usually immune to. How embarassing! OK, I got that fixed right away.MadAudio said:BTW, Glen on the compression guide link, "it's" should not have an apostrophe.
Benny, I went back and looked at this. The best double-source information I can find shows both the Eb Alto Sax (without the low A) and the A Clarinet as going down to a C#3, and the Bb Tenor Sax as going down to a B2. This is indeed where I show them all going on the frequency chart (I did originally show a C3 instead of a C#3 in the text, but that has been refined.) I'm not sure where you're getting the "low A" thing from?bennychico11 said:I was going to say...the saxophones/clarinet range is off by a few steps (particularly the lower fundamentals).
I guess maybe a disclaimer could be added for people not to use this sheet when trying to find the range of an instrument (for composing purposes). If you start composing alto sax music to go down to a low A, you're going to see quite a few players with their foot in their horns![]()
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Done. I actually extended it down to the low B, figuring that'll cover both the 5-string and the C extension mod. Also added a bit of text to the instrument detail to reflect that low fundamentals can go as low as B0.SonicAlbert said:Maybe you could indicate these possible lower notes on the bass by using the same black bar that you used for the low range of the tuba and french horn.
SouthSIDE Glen said:Hmmm, can you tell me which version of IE and which version of Windows you're running? That *should* not be an issue in IE...at least it does not show up on any of the machines it was beta tested on.
But if it is indeed happening in IE for you as well, that may be something I can code fix for.
If you can tell me the above info, as well as whether you're getting the status bar along the bottom and whether the auto-hide on the task bar helps or not, that will hopefully help me zero in on a fix.
Thanks for the info!
G.
SouthSIDE Glen said:Benny, I went back and looked at this. The best double-source information I can find shows both the Eb Alto Sax (without the low A) and the A Clarinet as going down to a C#3, and the Bb Tenor Sax as going down to a B2. This is indeed where I show them all going on the frequency chart (I did originally show a C3 instead of a C#3 in the text, but that has been refined.) I'm not sure where you're getting the "low A" thing from?
bennychico11 said:Ah, you're talking about the A clarinet...I guess, maybe it does have a more mellow of a tone.
RAK said:I have to agree there. I'm by no means a clarinetist, but having played with someone who uses both, I can say there are definetly tonal differences, and one does seem to be more appropriate at times, depending on the tune, and the key.
This is the hassle with making a chart like this is deciding on which member of an instrument family to choose as the "represntatve" in such a chart. Sometimes (not always) I chose ranges which were composites of nore than one version of the instrument, in order to give the full potential range for the instrument. The main purpose of this chart is not for the composer - who should be using note range tables like what you linked to, Ben, not bar graphsbennychico11 said:Ah, you're talking about the A clarinet. The A clarinet is not very common (yes, more common than the other clarinets)...but the clarinet you hear the most is the Bb soprano clarinet.
SouthSIDE Glen said:The main purpose of this chart is not for the composer - who should be using note range tables like what you linked to, Ben, not bar graphs- but for the curious listener and budding engineer.