Why does my tone get fuzzy...
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Why does my tone get fuzzy...
...whenever I double or triple tongue? And what/how to correct it.
- robcat2075
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Re: Why does my tone get fuzzy...
This is a situation where it would be highly useful to hear an example before diagnosing the problem.
Generally, when i hear players do "Flight of the Bumble Bee" or "Czardas" i feel like I'm hearing more tongue than note many times.
Logically, the tonguing has some minimum duration that can't get any shorter and still be tonguing, so there is some point where there's not enough time for normal note anymore.
But this is a situation where it would be highly useful to hear an example before diagnosing the problem.
Generally, when i hear players do "Flight of the Bumble Bee" or "Czardas" i feel like I'm hearing more tongue than note many times.
Logically, the tonguing has some minimum duration that can't get any shorter and still be tonguing, so there is some point where there's not enough time for normal note anymore.
But this is a situation where it would be highly useful to hear an example before diagnosing the problem.
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Re: Why does my tone get fuzzy...
I mostly get tongue-tied after a group of four sixteenths. That also results in fuzzy tone somehow. I have practiced it very slowly, but when I speed it up to where it belongs it falls apart.
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Re: Why does my tone get fuzzy...
Hi!
I had this issue for a while, and I think I may have some insight to share.
For me, a consistent, full tone while double and/or triple tonguing was challenging because it felt like a mental block I had to overcome. I single-tongued everything for the longest time because I could single tongue super fast, but when I started to double tongue, it was another thing for my brain to focus on while playing, which in turn resulted in a lackluster tone quality compared to what I was getting previously.
I think my best advice is to turn whatever exercise or excerpt your practicing into a long tone, and to practice slowly glissing through each note to make sure the tone quality is consistent and full on each note. Then, add double tonguing at a tempo that is slower than the marked tempo, and keep turning up the tempo as you work on making everything sound full and pretty.
Hope this helps!
I had this issue for a while, and I think I may have some insight to share.
For me, a consistent, full tone while double and/or triple tonguing was challenging because it felt like a mental block I had to overcome. I single-tongued everything for the longest time because I could single tongue super fast, but when I started to double tongue, it was another thing for my brain to focus on while playing, which in turn resulted in a lackluster tone quality compared to what I was getting previously.
I think my best advice is to turn whatever exercise or excerpt your practicing into a long tone, and to practice slowly glissing through each note to make sure the tone quality is consistent and full on each note. Then, add double tonguing at a tempo that is slower than the marked tempo, and keep turning up the tempo as you work on making everything sound full and pretty.
Hope this helps!

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Re: Why does my tone get fuzzy...
Hi .
I think that the double/ triple tonguing is not a so "easy" technical skill ; you need to practice it a lot , before feel comfortable with .
The tongue have to be activated in a non so common way.
In this D. Yeo' video , a MRI show us what happen inside our oral cavity :
I suggest to practice it at a very comfortable speed ( slow / medium slow) , first on some single tones , in the medium range ( from the F on the staff to the F one octave up) .
Regards
Giancarlo
I think that the double/ triple tonguing is not a so "easy" technical skill ; you need to practice it a lot , before feel comfortable with .
The tongue have to be activated in a non so common way.
In this D. Yeo' video , a MRI show us what happen inside our oral cavity :
I suggest to practice it at a very comfortable speed ( slow / medium slow) , first on some single tones , in the medium range ( from the F on the staff to the F one octave up) .
Regards
Giancarlo
- Doug Elliott
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Re: Why does my tone get fuzzy...
Correction:
That MRI show us what happens inside HIS oral cavity.
There are different ways to articulate that may work better for different people or circumstances.
That MRI show us what happens inside HIS oral cavity.
There are different ways to articulate that may work better for different people or circumstances.
"I know a thing or two because I've seen a thing or two."
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Re: Why does my tone get fuzzy...
Hi again.
Well , I have watched quite a few MRI videos about this technic , and they show pretty much the same tongue action .
Here is Sarah Willis on MRI : double tongue at 05:51
Both Douglas Yeo and Sarah Willis are musicians that I guess are playing in a general " correct" way .
For sure there will be different ways to performe this technics ; but , as in some Dave Wilken videos about embouchure ( for example "Lip vibration of brass embouchures , Leno , part 1 of 3" , in which we see the embouchure of B. Watrous , S . Dempster , G. Roberts , etc , ) , we usually start giving a look at how the lead players do it , as general references .
Regards
Giancarlo
Well , I have watched quite a few MRI videos about this technic , and they show pretty much the same tongue action .
Here is Sarah Willis on MRI : double tongue at 05:51
Both Douglas Yeo and Sarah Willis are musicians that I guess are playing in a general " correct" way .
For sure there will be different ways to performe this technics ; but , as in some Dave Wilken videos about embouchure ( for example "Lip vibration of brass embouchures , Leno , part 1 of 3" , in which we see the embouchure of B. Watrous , S . Dempster , G. Roberts , etc , ) , we usually start giving a look at how the lead players do it , as general references .
Regards
Giancarlo
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Re: Why does my tone get fuzzy...
It appears in both videos that when fast double tonguing the front tip of the tongue remains forward almost, if not, in contact with the lower teeth. But when playing a sustained note the tongue recedes back well away from the teeth after the attack.
- Doug Elliott
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Re: Why does my tone get fuzzy...
And that is what tends to make the sound less good when multiple tonguing.
If you listen carefully while watching both of those videos, you can clearly see and hear how much the tongue position affects the sound. Both of them focus the sound using tongue shape after the begininng of the note. Most obviously Sarah Willis does that - you can hear her sound constantly changing as she adjusts her tongue position while finding the focus.
"I know a thing or two because I've seen a thing or two."
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Re: Why does my tone get fuzzy...
When I was young I had a very fast single tongue. Somehow, in college for a friend's recital and then again a few years later with a touring brass quintet, I played the tuba part of the Malcom Arnold brass quintet on bass trombone without double tonguing. If you don't know it, in the 3rd movement there's a very fast scalar passage of 16ths notes ranging from the low valve register into the middle register and back. What I was doing was probably pretty close to a doodle tongue. Now I play that with a loose, quasi-legato double tongue.
Anyway, when I finally decided I needed to really learn to multiple tongue well (after some fairly embarrassing struggles on gigs), I started with the triple tongue section of the Arban's book - which comes BEFORE the double tongue section, BTW - and played it painfully slow, relatively loud, with articulations as firm and pointed as I could get them, and with every note as looooong as possible with no spaces between them. The syllables I used were tu-tu-ku. NOT ta-ta-ka or to-to-ko. The U formation has less motion of the tongue and jaw after the articulation.
I realize this is not the way it's usually taught, but it was very helpful to me. I found that certain aspects of my basic tone production noticeably changed for the better. My observation of what was happening was that the my embouchure formation was changing to a shape that worked with the articulations. It did not close anything down - rather, the sound became both more focused and bigger.
In practice I use a much lighter, looser multiple tongue stroke in most circumstances now - du-gu-du-gu or even lu-ngu-lu-ngu - and legato double tongue is something I do often.
I guess what I'm suggesting is that, in order to get your multiple tonguing to sound better, you need to practice making the multiple tongue sound good and let that change the way you play when you're doing other articulations as well. I think you'll be better off in every way.
Anyway, when I finally decided I needed to really learn to multiple tongue well (after some fairly embarrassing struggles on gigs), I started with the triple tongue section of the Arban's book - which comes BEFORE the double tongue section, BTW - and played it painfully slow, relatively loud, with articulations as firm and pointed as I could get them, and with every note as looooong as possible with no spaces between them. The syllables I used were tu-tu-ku. NOT ta-ta-ka or to-to-ko. The U formation has less motion of the tongue and jaw after the articulation.
I realize this is not the way it's usually taught, but it was very helpful to me. I found that certain aspects of my basic tone production noticeably changed for the better. My observation of what was happening was that the my embouchure formation was changing to a shape that worked with the articulations. It did not close anything down - rather, the sound became both more focused and bigger.
In practice I use a much lighter, looser multiple tongue stroke in most circumstances now - du-gu-du-gu or even lu-ngu-lu-ngu - and legato double tongue is something I do often.
I guess what I'm suggesting is that, in order to get your multiple tonguing to sound better, you need to practice making the multiple tongue sound good and let that change the way you play when you're doing other articulations as well. I think you'll be better off in every way.
Gabe Rice
Stephens Brass Instruments Artist
Faculty
Boston University School of Music
Kinhaven Music School Senior Session
Bass Trombonist
Rhode Island Philharmonic Orchestra
Vermont Symphony Orchestra
Stephens Brass Instruments Artist
Faculty
Boston University School of Music
Kinhaven Music School Senior Session
Bass Trombonist
Rhode Island Philharmonic Orchestra
Vermont Symphony Orchestra
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Re: Why does my tone get fuzzy...
You have confirmed my suspicions, Gabe, that perhaps my struggles with multiple tonguing are rooted in inefficient single articulations. I find that when I use the "ta" syllable it tends to broaden the tongue while when I use the "tu" syllable it narrows the tongue which may focus the air stream more as well as the embouchure. Yes?? I will certainly explore this. My other struggle is that I tend to get "tongue-tied" in prolonged multiple tonguing. It's like my tongue can't keep track of which syllable comes next. Thanks for confirming my suspected suspicions. Back to the practice room.GabrielRice wrote: ↑Sun Apr 20, 2025 6:38 pm I guess what I'm suggesting is that, in order to get your multiple tonguing to sound better, you need to practice making the multiple tongue sound good and let that change the way you play when you're doing other articulations as well. I think you'll be better off in every way.
- Wilktone
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Re: Why does my tone get fuzzy...
Sometimes when we start practicing something unfamiliar or uncomfortable we end up dropping something else. I suggest you check your breath support while multiple tonguing while you’re at it. You could be backing off on the air. Try practice the passage or exercise with no tongue at all (except perhaps initial attacks after a breath). Four 16th notes on the same pitch that would be double tongued would sound like a full value quarter note. Then repeat with the double tonguing and strive to keep the air flowing just the same.