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Books > Music > Musical instruments & instrumental ensembles > Wind instruments > General
Withheld by leading pedagogues in an effort to control competition,
the art of reed making in the early 20th century has been shrouded
in secrecy, producing a generation of performers without reed
making fluency. While tenets of past decades remain in modern
pedagogy, Christin Schillinger details the historical pedagogical
trends of bassoon reed making to examine the impact different
methods have had on the practice of reed making and performance
today. Schillinger traces the pedagogy of reed making from the
earliest known publication addressing bassoon pedagogy in 1687
through the publication of Julius Weissenborn's Praktische
Fagott-Schule and concludes with an in-depth look at contemporary
methodologies developed by Louis Skinner, Don Christlieb, Norman
Herzberg, and Lewis Hugh Cooper. Aimed at practitioners and
pedagogues of the bassoon, this book provides a deeper
understanding of the history and technique surrounding reed-making
craft and instruction.
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