michaelthetrombonist wrote: ↑Wed Dec 07, 2022 1:17 pm
Maybe this is kind of a language barrier but i don’t quite understand what idiomatic style means could anyone maybe explain?
Characteristic style. Writing within the limitations of the instrument. Writing to the instrument's inherent advantages.
Examples...
Wind instruments have to stop to breathe eventually, some more frequently than others. Strings can bow pretty much continuously without noticeable breaks.
Woodwinds are facile at rapid passage work, trombones and horns are not.
A flute can only manage a
mezzo piano at most in its lowest range and but struggles to do less than
fortissimo in its highest. An oboe has the opposite problem. Does a bassoon even have a
fortissimo?
A trombone can play a fairly long
legato line above the staff, but below the staff, the air runs out too soon. One loud pedal note can exhaust an entire lungful of air in seconds but I can hold a quiet middle C for forty.
An organ can sustain a note indefinitely. A piano's sustain is mostly imaginary.
And many more.
Half of orchestration is knowing what is practical to ask the instruments to do and where it is practical in their range to do it.
These characteristics have a lot to do with why trombone music is different from violin music which is different from clarinet music.