
But seriously, is the long notes less and less among today's trombone players and pedagogy?
Leif
When I play and listen for this I play a low Bb within the staff on first. An octave and a fifth above is then a very strong overtone F. To me the Bb, A, Ab, G, Gb, F and E also give that loud overtone. Leif, try to listen for this and change the tongue, mouth cave, throat and chest to add resonance. You might discover you can make that overtone to sing stronger. The discovery I did with this is I can get it stronger with a smaller mouth cave, for me smaller than I was used to before I started to do this. The same with the decima. I try to expand my sound on those notes with this method. I started to do this after I'd seen the video Sabutin put up with overtone singing. I have no clue if this has made a change in my sound over the whole register, but it is something I believe in. The difference in my ears on those notes after I have done this for a while can be big. Then there are all the other notes too...Savio wrote: ↑Thu Aug 15, 2019 1:01 am Yes, only long notes is like eating only meat all the time. We need some variation. The reason I ask this question is because when I go somewhere where there is other players, all I listen is fast slurs. Not so often long notes. Both Roger Bobo and Kleinhammer is mentioned. How is their approach? (maybe get the books ) Tom, can you listen the overtones? I never tried listen for them. Anyway, today I have to try some slurs, never been good at them. And my attacks are not in shape either.
Anyway, then I understand long notes is still today a part of it.
Leif
Fundamentals of Musical Acoustics, by Benade in 1976, describes a method of adjusting trumpet mouthpieces by playing a note and listening carefully for one of the upper partials, and then drilling out the throat until that note is just right.
paulyg wrote: ↑Wed Aug 14, 2019 6:20 pm I way overdid it with long tones a couple years back, and haven't really re-incorporated them since.
I was doing the Schlossberg exercises 7-21, in three octaves, slowly. Every day. Took about an hour and a half. It would often crowd out the rest of my practice. This was stupid.
I was trying to improve my middle register and general sound- these were effective to a point, but what I've found much more useful are scales and slurs. Slurs done correctly should have the same benefit as long tones, as they connect two long tones- and then it doesn't matter how long you play them, as long as they are centered.
One issue with the long tone focus is that it can leave areas of your playing totally isolated from your natural setup. I was doing these insane high register long tones (holding out high F for quite some time), but couldn't connect them to the rest of my range. I call that useless.