Chapter III - Multiple Sounds consists of a brief historical overview and dialogue of acoustical explanations for this phenomenon. Multiphonics are classified according to property (overtones or undertones), in practical sequences (according to identical left hand fingerings), by pitch (lowest), timbre, dynamic range, response, stability, and possibility to approach from highest or lowest pitch alone. Many musical examples. ~more~

Etudes and Exercises are designed as a companion to charts and musical examples of extended techniques. Only a small selection of material from this encyclopedic catalog has been used in these etudes in order to provide both an outline for further development. Each etude is prefaced with a description of its difficulties and suggestions for exercises to approach these difficulties before and during practice. These suggested methods incorporate conventional concepts and methods of clarinet playing and teaching. The etudes are organized into four categories, arranged from closest to conventional techniques [alternate fingerings], to most experimental [non-pitched resources]. ~more~

Chapter IV - Other Resources includes sounds of definite pitch, sounds of indefinite or ambiguous pitch (noise and pitch approximation), and specific techniques (flutter tonguing, etc.) which may be applied to sounds of one or both categories (or conventional tones, sounds from Chapters II and III, etc.). Many musical examples ~more~

Tanosaki-Richards Duo The Tanosaki-Richards Duo, active since 1982, has performed at the 1989 International Electronic Music Plus Festival (Oberlin, OH), the Tokyo American Center, the 1990 and 1993 Kobe International Festivals of Modern Music (Japan), the 1992 Music Forum Series at Shobi Conservatory (Tokyo, Japan), the 1993 Meet the Composer Series at the Center for Computer Music and Music Technology of the Kunitachi College of Music (Tokyo), the 1995 Asian Composers' Forum (Sendai, Japan), in residence at the Conservatorio G. Nicolini, Piacenza, Italy, and at 25 colleges and universities throughout the US and Japan. Read about them, hear clips from their recordings, and peruse information about upcoming concerts. ~more~