Expanding your Scales on the Trumpet
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 3 ต.ค. 2024
- Master trumpet player Ingrid Jensen shows how you can expand your scale work in your warm-up routine to develop your range, and to build a better feeling for your trumpet playing!
Learn more at the Jazz Academy by visiting academy.jazz.org
Ingrid Jensen - Trumpet
Eric Suquet - Director
Bill Thomas - Director of Photography
Aaron Chandler - Sound Engineer
Richard Emery - Production Assistant
Seton Hawkins - Producer
Recorded August 2, 2013
Oh my gosh. That drone works! I can compare your intervals with the drone and can hear how you are able to center your tone and pitch on each note, playing so beautifully in tune. It makes scale/interval exercises sound like music, like a song. What a great tool. Thanks for sharing!
This video made me cry and I don’t know why
Very cool...like the lip bends too. What a great way to practice improvising and improve your sound, range and flexibility at the same time.
They should interview different style type musicians/teachers. Like classical or orchestral musicians. I want to see how they go about playing on stage and their daily technique to achieve that. I'm so inspired right now watching these. thank you!
beautiful intonation and choice of notes
Wonderful 😊
Wow, what a beautiful sound!! Thanks!!
what a great stuff
Such a pretty sound. Very natural approach. Need to get back to using drones.
so helpful!
i need more of these
Where can I find drone tones?
Thank you very much. Powerful thoughts here!
Love this. Thanks!
Graciaas me ayudaría mucho subtitular en español
..grscias
Where can I buy one of those drone boxes?
I was able to find them on Amazon
Inspiring
How can I sustain a note on the upper register without cracking my tone?
Strong air, strong embouchure and don't use too much pressure
You can't, it's impossible
@@Onlinepersonality212lie
Thanks a lot. Nevertheless I would like you to help me out (Because I know you can) on how to increase my range on G. I've been playing the trumpet for not less than 6 years now but as I speak, I've not been able to play a third note on G in the upper register. Please help.
Play "Caruso's six notes" every day before you practice. Immediately after this exercise, rest for 15 minutes before playing anything else. Make sure you do not play too much. The second you start to strain to hit a high note, you are compromise your embouchure.
Play chromatically up as high as you can WITHOUT STRAINING. You should be able to play higher notes with the same effort that it takes to play lower notes, so keep this idea in mind. If you are straining to play a higher note, you are not yet ready to play that note, but it will come eventually.
So play chromatically up to the highest note you can play without straining, and then rest for 30 seconds. Then repeat this probably 5 times, and then rest for 10 minutes. This should be the only set of exercises you do that strains your chops. After these exercises, work on other ones in your current playable range, and remember to ALWAYS play softly. The Clarke studies stress this a lot.
Wait. Are my eyeballs just seeing an Adams A4? :D
It's a Monette