
any tips?


This.harrisonreed wrote: ↑Mon Feb 10, 2025 1:45 pm Yeah, you can gain quite a lot of range by consistently using the correct mechanics for your embouchure.
And a follow on, possibly less popular opinion, but definitely true for me -- it might not be possible to use your embouchure "correctly" with a mainstream mouthpiece size.tbdana wrote: ↑Mon Feb 10, 2025 3:15 pmThis.harrisonreed wrote: ↑Mon Feb 10, 2025 1:45 pm Yeah, you can gain quite a lot of range by consistently using the correct mechanics for your embouchure.
If you have good mechanics those notes (and above) become easy. Those notes should take almost no effort if you’re doing things right. Get a good teacher.
Truth! In one lesson Doug Elliott really opened my eyes to what I need to be doing. Heck, even what he thought I might need to do end up being correct as well!harrisonreed wrote: ↑Mon Feb 10, 2025 1:45 pm Yeah, you can gain quite a lot of range by consistently using the correct mechanics for your embouchure. You can either take 10 years to learn that for yourself, maybe, or get a lesson with the right person who knows how to assess and teach embouchure mechanics to help you learn the mechanics in a few months.
I don't know. I think it's because I have a significant overbite (top teeth past lower jaw), and long top teeth. I have a high placement, downstream type embouchure which apparently is a type that lends itself towards larger rim diameters. I can't play like Joe, but I play similarly to the way he does, if that makes sense. I think he is even higher placement though. And truth be told his mouthpiece diameter works for me but is ever so slightly too wide for my taste. Measured against DE setups, where a DE XT106 = 1.060, his 1C mouthpiece is like 1.067 and mine is 1.055. Take that with a huge grain of salt, as I am relying on measurements done by others.
Well, big feet, big sound, they say. Used to be big ego but that's been toppled a long time ago!
Interesting, I have the same overbite issue, and I also only feel comfortable on mouthpieces with larger rims. My mouthpiece placement is fairly high too.Harrison: I don't know. I think it's because I have a significant overbite (top teeth past lower jaw)
What syllable are you tonguing with?Trombonekla wrote: ↑Mon Feb 10, 2025 12:38 pmI've been playing trombone for 5 month and i cant reach A4 B4
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That's me as well.JeffBone44 wrote: ↑Wed Feb 12, 2025 2:46 pmInteresting, I have the same overbite issue, and I also only feel comfortable on mouthpieces with larger rims. My mouthpiece placement is fairly high too.Harrison: I don't know. I think it's because I have a significant overbite (top teeth past lower jaw)
Umm..tu tu turobcat2075 wrote: ↑Fri Feb 14, 2025 10:09 amWhat syllable are you tonguing with?Trombonekla wrote: ↑Mon Feb 10, 2025 12:38 pmI've been playing trombone for 5 month and i cant reach A4 B4
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Well, that is already a plan for failure right there.
Doesn't "tu" come from Arbans, and represents a French vowel we don't have in English? I'm not sure I even know what it's supposed to sound like.Notice that "tu" has no place on this chart. "Tu" creates a poor and congested tone.
That is an interesting question, along with how do different mouthpieces or bores affect the placement?AtomicClock wrote: ↑Wed Mar 19, 2025 9:46 pm... I wonder how our brothers in the trumpet and tuba sections use vowels. Does the whole chart shift octaves with the instrument, or are they just extending the chart left and right?
Yeah, it's in Arban's... and the First Division Band Method i had in sixth grade... and the instrumental pedagogy textbook I had in college. They should all be burned. It is building-in failure from the outset.Doesn't "tu" come from Arbans, and represents a French vowel we don't have in English? I'm not sure I even know what it's supposed to sound like.Notice that "tu" has no place on this chart. "Tu" creates a poor and congested tone.
There is a specific way Parisian French pronounce "tu" that has no English equivalent. It's a much more nasal and "forward" vowel placement.robcat2075 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 20, 2025 10:09 am When I took French in college, the native-French-speaking teacher never pronounced "tu" anything like "tah" and i doubt there was ever a French "dialect" that did so. French "tu" is very close to our English "too". I think Arban's "tu" is just carelessness made canon.![]()
And some experimentation with a cornet suggest the same.robcat2075 wrote: ↑Thu Mar 20, 2025 10:09 amThat is an interesting question, along with how do different mouthpieces or bores affect the placement?AtomicClock wrote: ↑Wed Mar 19, 2025 9:46 pm
... I wonder how our brothers in the trumpet and tuba sections use vowels. Does the whole chart shift octaves with the instrument, or are they just extending the chart left and right?
My experimentation with my tuba suggests that the vowels approximately shift with the pitch of the horn but... I'm not a hard-charging tuba player and I haven't made a big study of it.