We already have a huge body of work written for transposing instruments, and virtually all musicians playing those instruments are very familiar with reading for those instruments in their transposed keys. Changing all that requires editing every piece of music that's ever existed before being able to put it in front of people trained to read the instrument in concert pitch (or an adjusted simplified transposition), and retraining all existing musicians (or maintaining transposed and concert-pitch versions of all sheet music until all the traditionally-trained musicians retire/die off).

The biggest reason is that music is like history; it is the sum total of everything that has come before. So, if we were, at some point, to say "OK, from now on, we'll teach all new entering middle school band students in concert pitch and do away with all this transposing", we'd have to go back and transpose every piece of music that has ever been written for those instruments. Then, all the existing master instrumentalists would have to re-learn how to sightread for their instrument (something I don't think they'd be keen on, meaning for the next 50 years or so you'd have to keep and differentiate between "concert key" and "transposed key" versions of the part for each transposing instrument and each piece). It would be a painful transition, and we in the U.S. don't tend to like changing basic learned patterns, even if it would ultimately make our lives easier (one of the reasons the U.S. still hasn't fully switched to metric, and most of us still type on QWERTY keyboards, which are difficult to use by design)?


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For instance, modern clarinets come in a huge variety of sizes -- E-flat Sopranino, B-flat Soprano, A Soprano, E-flat Alto, B-flat Bass, E-flat Contra-alto, B-flat Contra-bass ... and even F Basset Horn (which is actually part of the clarinet family and is retained in the orchestral arsenal largely because of the large amount of music Mozart wrote for them). Interestingly, ALL of these clarinets use virtually the exact same fingering scheme, which allows any clarinetist to switch easily among the various varieties -- for an entire work or performance, just one selection, or even in the middle of a single work and back again. In addition, virtually all of the woodwinds are built on almost identical fingering methodologies -- with the exception of Bassoon (although the bottom register of a clarinet highly resembles that instrument's fingering structure). The Saxophone family is similarly varied, and the same fingering principles apply from one to the next. If you look at fingering charts for Flute, Oboe, English Horn, Clarinet and Saxophone, the note "D" is fingered in precisely the same way because the parts for these instruments is transposed to allow for this.

I Have an iPhone 6 and just tried to listen to music on the Apple Music app and realized all my music was gone! COMPLETely GONE!!! its just two playlist I had but they are EMPTY. Please how can I restore my music. I stopped using Spotify because I trusted Apple. I had offline somgs and they are gone too. I'm thinking to stop paying for this and going back to Spotify. If anyone can help me????

Apple is a failure. This is the 3rd time all my music has been deleted. Either through updates or just plugging it into my new computer. But guess Apple didn't think about people buying new computers. I hate this disgusting waste of trash company products. I'm switching to android.

I would start with making sure both Apple Music and iCloud Music Library are turned on in Settings > Music, as both of those are needed to see all your music, not just Apple Music. Here is more info about how Apple Music and iCloud Music Library work.

I'm not sure the full picture is understood. Turning on iCloud music library proceeds to delete tracks on your device if they were not purchased through Apple. I think the intent is to give "the best quality" tracks from what IS avail on Apple Music, and "conveniently" keep it in the cloud. However, there is much that is not available on iTunes. Personally, I have been ripping my extensive CD collection for many years, and have many albums recorded by friends and local bands, as well as many audio classes.

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So just how does music promote well-being, enhance learning, stimulate cognitive function, improve quality of life, and even induce happiness? The answer is, because music can activate almost all brain regions and networks, it can help to keep a myriad of brain pathways and networks strong, including those networks that are involved in well-being, learning, cognitive function, quality of life, and happiness. In fact, there is only one other situation in which you can activate so many brain networks all at once, and that is when you participate in social activities. 006ab0faaa

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