Handbells | |
|
English Handbells were introduced to the US in the 1920's by P.T. Barnum. Despite these ignoble beginnings, the art has progressed to include some of the finest amateur musicians (and not a few semi-professionals, as well) with an amazing output every year of both original compositions and arrangements of other tunes. (Granted, not all of these are masterpieces, but hey, even Beethoven had his "off" days. Just look at "Wellington's Victory.") Document ResourcesA while back I noticed that there was a need in the handbell community for a central depot of basic information. On the Handbell-L (more on this below) it seemed that the same questions kept coming up over and over again, and to answer these questions either someone had to recompose the same answers again and again, or go foraging through the archives to find a previously-composed answer. I designed this site to be an archive for some of the frequently-asked-questions of the bell world. Since then, though, the site has exploded into a repository for as much of the basic information of the ringing art as I can come up with. Some of these documents have been written by other people, as noted within the document itself. Most, though, have been written by me, and as such reflect my biases about ringing. While I have tried to include as many different viewpoints as possible on controversial matters, you may still find you disagree with me on points. Just as there's no single way to play the violin or program a computer, there's no One True Path to musical excellence on handbells. If you feel that there is a viewpoint which I am neglecting in any document, please tell me! Likewise, if you have a topic you'd like to see covered, let me know. Even better: write it up yourself, and I will archive it here. All these documents are Copyright © 1997-2003 Paul Kingsbury, unless otherwise stated. You may distribute them as you see fit, but you must cite the author(s) and give the full URL of the document.
Other Handbell ResourcesNaturally, this site is not the be-all and end-all of handbell resources on the Web, although I wish it were. Some of the others are listed below:
Go back to:
Comments? Questions? Complaints? Mail me! kingsbur at unagi dot cis dot upenn dot edu Last modified: Sat Mar 11 23:09:13 EST |