@@Samjs916 Thank you so much for letting me know the gentleman's name. I played trombone myself... many years ago. I will be sure to check out his work.
@@ScottWDoyle he will never claim it, but we studied under the same director! Thara Memory. I've played gigs with him a bunch! They did not get along well lol
Ain’t that the truth?! I wished I’d gone professional with horn playing. Didnt seem like a feasible career when I was a kid. Little did I know that I could make half a mil per year as the lead trumpet of the Lincoln jazz orchestra. 😂 Edit: but getting back into it now that I’m older, I feel I understand the instrument better. So it’s never too late to pick up the brass! You’d be surprised with what you may now be able to do.
This short is amazing in a way that I don't think I can give too much detail in a short-form comment, but I couldn't appreciate it and all talents involved until I watched the entire thing. It's great and I hope people do. Kudos to all.
@@tayar3797 Preface: I am a musician. Though "talent" may have been used incorrectly in a technical manner, the fact that all are invested and passionate, to me, is part of the talent and *you can tell by listening*. They are spectacular and my incompetence doesn't take away from that. Even then, talent is a poor term because people have, historically, used it for people who are practiced in a field without being aware of it because the person is young.
@@mkylem a very good response, I was just being sensitive, people are just so wound up in talent these days when they don't realize that nearly everything is available to them to achieve these so called "talents". I'm also a musician, just a young one at that.
@@tayar3797Natural talent is definitely a thing, though it's hard to tell from this short clip if any of these players have a natural inclination for their instrument, but given where they are they probably do. That being said, it doesnt matter how much talent you have, which I consider myself to have been blessed with it considerbly, you still have to put a lot of time and practice to be good, as did I. But I don't get offended when my friends talk about how easily music comes to me, cause they're right.
Very cool. You can feel the respect the kids have for their teacher...and the teacher has for his pupils. That's how progress is made...a journey into the beautiful world of music together. Takes me back to my school years.
This is one of the hardest sections for the bones in all of written music. In fact, l cannot remember ever needing nearly as much sectional rehearsal time for any other spot, in or out of the big band genre. And for those unfamiliar with it, this little bit of rehearsing is under half tempo.
The best way to learn a piece or difficult part is to articulate it by mouth first as this teacher is doing. It transfers to your lips and fingers so much better. When I was in high school orchestra, we always approached a new piece this way. He is a true educator.
I had a very hard time just playing "my tones" in simple duets with my teacher. It took me a long while to "tune into myself" rather than the outside "noise"....which I eventually had to tune IN TO, eh? We need more training like this! I'm 64. America lost it's ear training classes just around the time I was born in 1960.
Normally a lot of conductors are grumpy people but he seems pretty cool, funky, and a fun teacher (I still have good music teachers and conductors at school)
They’re just starting out on this riff and they already sound great! They probably already know this by now, but to make it stop sounding choppy, you don’t wait for anyone else to play their part, you play over them exactly when you need to. If you need to, start slower and slower, then get back to faster and faster again once you’ve got the timing and tone down pat
I’ve never been able to read a chart and hear the rhythm. I have done disability that makes those types of thought processes much harder for me. I wish I had a teacher like this, who could break it down for me. I still carved my way into a career making the art I love in film and music, but I really with I could get a solid coach to help me overcome my noggin.
@@Joseph-nh6in Yeah, but you’re not going to like it, haha. My best advice is to learn marketing 101 and decide what the narrowest niche you are willing to fill looks like. That can be doing jingles for catfood specifically, or deciding that you’re going to be a session musician for children’s adventure tv cartoons. Once you’ve decided the best way to market yourself and your target audience(producers, directors, distributors), then you work your ass off to make yourself worry hiring over your competitors. That looks like buying courses and learning theory as much as applicable to your decided niche, that means learning how what jingle will sell the most product or what scale/mode, will fit the overall narrative best. Once you’ve done that, you then need to work on yourself and become a great networker and someone that people want to work with. Charisma university will help with that. In the end, it takes serious hard work and dedication. Don’t focus on your band or making a record deal, because in all likelihood, that won’t happen. You gotta get creative and do something with music that makes you happy. My story in a nut shell was, I gave up on music when my band broke up before a big tour opportunity came to fruition. I decided to be come a missionary for a decade. I got married, had babies and realized that I needed to start a career, so my wife encouraged me to start a video production company. I failed A LOT, but eventually I learned from my mistakes, got a coach and I make music for documentary and commercials. Some I make for my own films and some tunes are for other clients. All in all, I’m not there yet, I’m still growing and I’m only 30 years old. Who knows what this will look like when I’m 50. My wife and I could finally get that record deal. Edit: Stay focused on building an actual career that you can support a family with. You can do that via any musical niche, there is an infinite amount of work out there for a creative mind that’s willing to spend a few years breaking their back. Don’t give up.
I have always wanted to learn to play the trombone,but have only lived in apartments. I wonder if my neighbors would accept me learning the trombone if I invited them to join? Imagine walking by an apartment building while 35 beginners is practicing!
I’m 36, and practice tenor sax every day in a Brooklyn apartment from 7 to 9pm. My neighbors tell me the whole building can hear it, but that is ok cause it’s “a New York thing” I’m just happy I can practice. You can also go to prospect park to practice. There are also mutes, if there’s a will there’s a way. 🙏🏽❤️
O negócio é internalizar os compassos " quebrados" tais como : 7/8-11/8 e as combinações dos compassos tradicionais como: 4/4-2/4 ou ainda 5/8 e se entender com os contratempos dentro da música e passar tudo isso para o instrumento dentro do estilo que se pede.
Блин, я бы кайфовал от такого преподавания в музыкалке. И от этих мелодий получал бы удовольствие. Жаль, давно это было... я уже и забыл как тромбон держать... 😢
As someone who has just started sax and has been playing guitar but always found rhythm and guitar weirdly confusing I but I can play it fairly well, check my channel but I just started sax and this feel like the right instrument for me to really learn bepop… yesssss !
as a musician, i can assure you that this isn’t really anything out of the ordinary for rehearsal. it’s even a little relaxed for an ostensibly higher level group of players
Oh Lord. Remind me never to make a joke in a TH-cam comments section again. 😁 Even after I posted a follow-up to clarify the joke, people are still commenting to tell me I'm mistaken. Ah, well. At least nearly thirty people seem to have got it.
Clearly a wonderful teacher.
That's Javier Nero!
@@Samjs916 Thank you so much for letting me know the gentleman's name. I played trombone myself... many years ago. I will be sure to check out his work.
@@ScottWDoyle he will never claim it, but we studied under the same director! Thara Memory. I've played gigs with him a bunch! They did not get along well lol
As a white person, I can relate to needing additional rhythm instruction...
@@TinaObigwebi oh I feel that one 😂.....unlike rhythm..
Hearing “better” during a rest is such a good feeling, I miss it man
Director throws you a "Good!" on a rest... man, im glowing the rest of the day 😊
That or a “there ya go” 😂
Ain’t that the truth?! I wished I’d gone professional with horn playing. Didnt seem like a feasible career when I was a kid. Little did I know that I could make half a mil per year as the lead trumpet of the Lincoln jazz orchestra. 😂
Edit: but getting back into it now that I’m older, I feel I understand the instrument better. So it’s never too late to pick up the brass! You’d be surprised with what you may now be able to do.
Me too😢
@@space_1073😊
Love a teacher who can break it down for the students to actually hear what it should sound like.
Awesome ❤❤❤
Great teacher - shows it visually, states it verbally, acts it out physically. Everybody gets it.
It is waaaayyy easier when working with musicians than persons who are not musically but can play an instrument.
Man’s teaching how to FEEL music. Gotta feel it to become legendary. Good job.
This short is amazing in a way that I don't think I can give too much detail in a short-form comment, but I couldn't appreciate it and all talents involved until I watched the entire thing. It's great and I hope people do. Kudos to all.
Its practice and skill not talent
@@tayar3797 Preface: I am a musician. Though "talent" may have been used incorrectly in a technical manner, the fact that all are invested and passionate, to me, is part of the talent and *you can tell by listening*.
They are spectacular and my incompetence doesn't take away from that. Even then, talent is a poor term because people have, historically, used it for people who are practiced in a field without being aware of it because the person is young.
@@mkylem a very good response, I was just being sensitive, people are just so wound up in talent these days when they don't realize that nearly everything is available to them to achieve these so called "talents". I'm also a musician, just a young one at that.
@@tayar3797Natural talent is definitely a thing, though it's hard to tell from this short clip if any of these players have a natural inclination for their instrument, but given where they are they probably do. That being said, it doesnt matter how much talent you have, which I consider myself to have been blessed with it considerbly, you still have to put a lot of time and practice to be good, as did I. But I don't get offended when my friends talk about how easily music comes to me, cause they're right.
I'm a professional (wannabe jazz) musician myself (violin) and THAT was freakin' AWESOME.
Love the blue bell horn, the section sound great
Very cool. You can feel the respect the kids have for their teacher...and the teacher has for his pupils. That's how progress is made...a journey into the beautiful world of music together. Takes me back to my school years.
This is one of the hardest sections for the bones in all of written music. In fact, l cannot remember ever needing nearly as much sectional rehearsal time for any other spot, in or out of the big band genre.
And for those unfamiliar with it, this little bit of rehearsing is under half tempo.
Thats my friend Kazeem with the sick ass horn
go kazeem
Shazam
Bet that’s sounds crazy in context
It's a very tricky Duke Ellington tune called "Braggin' in Brass" and it does sound crazy in context!
Those ppl are amazing.
Braggin’ in Brass. Great chart!
You guys bring me a lot of pleasant memories ❤😊
That slide was beautiful
The best way to learn a piece or difficult part is to articulate it by mouth first as this teacher is doing. It transfers to your lips and fingers so much better.
When I was in high school orchestra, we always approached a new piece this way.
He is a true educator.
Wow. Never heard trumbone sound this beautiful.❤
Marching bass spilts!
I loved doing bass splits
Not quite
I love this modeling for Rhythm that the band director is giving.💯🤓🎺
He chose to say “better” instead of “still a lot to improve”
"not my tempo !!!" 😂 Waiting for him to scream and throw a book
🪑
Lmao i was looking for a similar comment
Dude on the far left has such a beautiful trombone
I had a very hard time just playing "my tones" in simple duets with my teacher. It took me a long while to "tune into myself" rather than the outside "noise"....which I eventually had to tune IN TO, eh? We need more training like this! I'm 64. America lost it's ear training classes just around the time I was born in 1960.
j'adore le trombone ...mais alors, UN ENSEMBLE DE TROMBONES , topissime !
I remember my days like this... best classes I ever had!
Being a drumline guy I really like the split parts between your trombone that's pretty sweet....
They made trombone sound good and as a 1 st chair trombone with 7th graders this makes me happy
I had the opportunity to do the same. That didn't have the courage Bravo to all of you. That's stepped forward, got a ton, keep it forward.❤
Magical voice.... feeling the music.... Black people fro USA are the best , i LOVE THEM
Future generations of people are here… YES!! Music is everything.
The key to staggered rhythms like this is to feel the OTHER parts while you're playing. You have to hear the whole or you're screwed.
Braggin’ in Brass. That trombone piece is a BEAST.
after listening to this teacher, i think I can now play the trombone!
Wasn't expecting this harmonies, that was good
Man this takes me back to high school!
Brilliant teacher. I expected the playing to be "beginner's" but that actually did not disappoint at all.
it's the national youth orchestra, some of the best young musicians in the country
My kid played trombone, he even played in clubs with his own band, and i loved it, but he gave it up when he graduated. 😢
The talent in this room! ❤️
I love the Trombone and these kids are great!
Great teaching! The look of discovery on their faces was empowering!
Hes the guy down the hall in whiplash, super chill and happy.
So beautiful to see this whole thing ❤
Cool to see a section working out braggin in brass
I’m so confused that I can’t even find the count in the beginning anywhere in the play section lol
Same problem here
Nice glimpse into that wonderful world❤
Everyone, just watch the original video. It's just a rhythm game he was teaching.
Where can I watch the original video??
*_First Class Jazz in the making!!_*
Awesome sound! Awesome leadership!
That timing SWANGS!
Normally a lot of conductors are grumpy people but he seems pretty cool, funky, and a fun teacher (I still have good music teachers and conductors at school)
Great teacher!!! Good job students! Super cool stuff there! Loll
BRAGGIN🔥
Kids are killing it. Well done!
They’re just starting out on this riff and they already sound great! They probably already know this by now, but to make it stop sounding choppy, you don’t wait for anyone else to play their part, you play over them exactly when you need to. If you need to, start slower and slower, then get back to faster and faster again once you’ve got the timing and tone down pat
I miss so much playing in an ensemble
😃🤩 I want to hear more!
Dupa dap bumpa do tap! I finally learned music....now I'm a musician!!!
Jazz, the supreme of all music.
Excellent reading! Sounds great
Next generation for the musical world!
Awesome!!!keep it up!!
Great sound.
Difficult stuff 👍
They're in the NYO?! They're like 18 years old! I bet these kids shred
The Coolest brass instrument
Not quite my tempo 💪👴🤏
How does my POV keep changing? It's too wild for my blood
It's amazing!
I’ve never been able to read a chart and hear the rhythm. I have done disability that makes those types of thought processes much harder for me. I wish I had a teacher like this, who could break it down for me.
I still carved my way into a career making the art I love in film and music, but I really with I could get a solid coach to help me overcome my noggin.
@dylan
Do you have any advice for how to have a successful music career?
@@Joseph-nh6in Yeah, but you’re not going to like it, haha.
My best advice is to learn marketing 101 and decide what the narrowest niche you are willing to fill looks like. That can be doing jingles for catfood specifically, or deciding that you’re going to be a session musician for children’s adventure tv cartoons.
Once you’ve decided the best way to market yourself and your target audience(producers, directors, distributors), then you work your ass off to make yourself worry hiring over your competitors. That looks like buying courses and learning theory as much as applicable to your decided niche, that means learning how what jingle will sell the most product or what scale/mode, will fit the overall narrative best.
Once you’ve done that, you then need to work on yourself and become a great networker and someone that people want to work with. Charisma university will help with that.
In the end, it takes serious hard work and dedication. Don’t focus on your band or making a record deal, because in all likelihood, that won’t happen. You gotta get creative and do something with music that makes you happy.
My story in a nut shell was, I gave up on music when my band broke up before a big tour opportunity came to fruition. I decided to be come a missionary for a decade. I got married, had babies and realized that I needed to start a career, so my wife encouraged me to start a video production company. I failed A LOT, but eventually I learned from my mistakes, got a coach and I make music for documentary and commercials. Some I make for my own films and some tunes are for other clients. All in all, I’m not there yet, I’m still growing and I’m only 30 years old. Who knows what this will look like when I’m 50. My wife and I could finally get that record deal.
Edit:
Stay focused on building an actual career that you can support a family with. You can do that via any musical niche, there is an infinite amount of work out there for a creative mind that’s willing to spend a few years breaking their back. Don’t give up.
I have always wanted to learn to play the trombone,but have only lived in apartments. I wonder if my neighbors would accept me learning the trombone if I invited them to join? Imagine walking by an apartment building while 35 beginners is practicing!
I’m 36, and practice tenor sax every day in a Brooklyn apartment from 7 to 9pm. My neighbors tell me the whole building can hear it, but that is ok cause it’s “a New York thing” I’m just happy I can practice. You can also go to prospect park to practice. There are also mutes, if there’s a will there’s a way. 🙏🏽❤️
The counting at the beginning had nothing to do with the actual riff?
Probably just to help them feel the subdivisions lol. I'm not quite sure exactly how it helps vs counting individual parts but clearly it works!
Omg thank you, I was trying to wrap my head around how it's related at all.
O negócio é internalizar os compassos " quebrados" tais como : 7/8-11/8 e as combinações dos compassos tradicionais como: 4/4-2/4 ou ainda 5/8 e se entender com os contratempos dentro da música e passar tudo isso para o instrumento dentro do estilo que se pede.
I live for the “to bah ca tah’s “
At this point I’ve just given in to the idea that I will never understand music haha sounds good though
trombone underrated
Que lindo verlos aprender de esa manera.!!❤
Rhythm sounds difficult, but the teacher is wonderful!
Awesome!!!! What a great teacher.
And somewhere in southern Nigerian, one Yoruba choir master is killing his choristers and instrumentalists with "mi-re-do-so" 🤣😜🤣😜
Amazing educator💯
so bright tone.
O cara é fera: a voz dele é uma sonoridade 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Magnifique !
Now. Was I rushing or was I dragging?
They were dragging lol but still killing it
Wow fantastic sound
"Were you rushing, or were you dragging?" 🥁🥁
Not quite my tempo.
Were you rushing or were you dragging?
😭😭
or are you gonna be on my time???
NOT MY TEMPO!!!!!!
Блин, я бы кайфовал от такого преподавания в музыкалке. И от этих мелодий получал бы удовольствие. Жаль, давно это было... я уже и забыл как тромбон держать... 😢
Beautiful ❤
not my tempo
WERE YOU RUSHING OR DRAGGGIN
WERE YOU RUSHING OR DRAGGGIN
ANSWER!!!
Beautiful
educator for excellence.
Practical and dynamic.
Very good.
So much talent
❤wonderful...wonderful !
Gettin in the groove... nice job teach
They sound great. Sounds like so Mickey Mouse cartoon music.
As someone who has just started sax and has been playing guitar but always found rhythm and guitar weirdly confusing I but I can play it fairly well, check my channel but I just started sax and this feel like the right instrument for me to really learn bepop… yesssss !
"Not quite my tempo" - JK Simmons
This honestly felt pretty tense.
I was waiting for the conductor to throw a chair at somebody's head.
as a musician, i can assure you that this isn’t really anything out of the ordinary for rehearsal. it’s even a little relaxed for an ostensibly higher level group of players
This seemed like a pretty chill rehearsal. Also stuff like that never really happens
This is pretty chill imo. What made you think it was tense?
Oh Lord.
Remind me never to make a joke in a TH-cam comments section again. 😁
Even after I posted a follow-up to clarify the joke, people are still commenting to tell me I'm mistaken.
Ah, well. At least nearly thirty people seem to have got it.
@@mike18699-e sorry that didn’t really sound like joke
Making me feel better here❤❤😂😂😂😊😊😊
The swing sold separately.