I've struggled with playing above the staff for 15 years. I tried this with no warmup and instantly played the best high C to double high C of my life, effortlessly. James is my hero!
@@johnpiettro4644 its all about vibration. move your mouthpiece to a different position, try further up or further down, roll lips in or out, just try. it takes time and time again but eventually you might get there, its all about vibration. 1860 vibrations for a doubble high C good luck
@@johnpiettro4644 it will be harder and easier for some, but I believe anybody can have a pretty good upper register. Practice a lot, experiment, make sure to keep bad habits out of your playing such as too much pressure, and you’ll figure it out. Dedication is the key to success.
You sir are a fantastic teacher. I love how you smile and keep an encouraging tone thoroughout. I teach at a University and this is something I want to emulate in my teaching. Thanks for the trumpet techniques also
Pure gold. Pure physics! At ITG Sydney 2010, I saw Andrea Tofanelli playing high notes and I saw James Morrison playing even higher, on a bass trumpet. (When I went overseas in ?1985, some schoolkid took over my trumpet chair in a northern Sydney jazz band - he was much better than me. Guess who. Yes, it was James M.)
Brass instruments are pretty universal when physics is concerned. I can play just as high on Tuba as I do on piccolo trumpet. It's all about Aperture Control. Faster Air Speed + Increased Air Pressure + Smaller Vibration Surface (lip length) = Higher Note
@@MrJasonharrelson simply false, the physics here is complete nonsense. The aperture state controls pitch, the air speed does not. Air pressure varies with loudness on a constant pitch, so therefore it does not control pitch. Ad lip "length" is rim to rim, unless you want a weak and puny sound.
Great tutorial James! Nobody has ever explained it so simply and clearly. Trumpet teachers all over the world should demand their students view this video. Thanks so much!
There were so many teachers, there were so many theories about high notes. But perhaps James Morrison's theory is the most credible. Because he really mastered all the brass instruments. If he does, it is so.
I've thought those same thoughts. Life can really sometimes get in the way. Can you do it with a practice mute? Do you have a car where you can drive to a parking lot? If you think outside the box, there are ways to find time to practice. :)
Andy Cormier LOL, I almost got a ticket for the parking lot playing, some residents didn't appreciate any noise past 7pm....but the practice mute or Harmon is great
One of the best series of trumpet tutorials on the Internet. There are dozens of “experts” that offer all kinds of instruction but Mr. Morrison explains it very well, with no arrogance, and achieves instant credibility. Thank you Mr. Morrison!
Just getting back to playing trumpet after several decades. Played for 10 years when I was young, but haven't played since. Your teaching videos are immensely helpful!
The way he explained this just opened a whole new world. Ive heared almost everything he said before, but the way he put it together made me understand all of it! Thank you!
I did a thesis on how a cornet (therefore trumpet) works from a physics point of view. James is right, though he didn’t go a little further to explain the resonant cavity that exists inside your mouth. For low notes, the tongue lowers and throat open up to resonate through the lips at a lower frequency. Higher, the throat closes and the tongue rises to create a smaller resonant cavity. The tongue rising also squeezes the airflow through a narrower opening speeding it up, to vibrate the lips faster as James explained. Trumpet mouthpiece design plays its part, because the cup depth creates another resonant cavity. Hence why 'screamer' mouthpieces are so shallow, creating a smaller high frequency cavity. If you try screaming on a bucket mouthpiece, then you’ll be fighting against the larger cavity here, that wants to resonate more slowly. Try moving your tongue up next time you play, to see what happens. Happy trumpeting
Nice! You and Prof. Faddis have the same approach but coming from different angles. Mark Zauss also does this. And, all three of you have 4+ octaves! Great stuff!
I have been playing trumpet for over 5 years and I am a lead trumpet, high notes are my absolute passion however I tend not to have good tone when I get to atmospheric notes, he has literally solved my problem within the first 3 minutes of the video! He also explains the logic behind it all, he doesn't just say this is what you should do and how you should do it. This video is crucial to any long term trumpet player, very informational! He did a very good job
Thanks Aussie, from a Kiwi across the Deetch / Dutch. The next time I take my horn outta its case, will literally be the second time. So discovering you so early in my brass section career is serendipity to the max. I’ve found the ideal teacher at the ideal juncture. I commit myself to aiming to be the ideal student
I have heard the same ideas before, but not explained the same way. It makes so much sense and I find myself playing solid high Fs and some double Gs without too much pressure. With my normal embouchure, I'm struggling (and using pressure) to hit a high E. Now my only concern is being able to take this out of a controlled environment into a "real" playing situation. Thank you James Morrison!
Mr Morrison, thank you for this video, it has opened up a whole new portal for me, I finally get it. I’ve been playing all my life and have damaged my lips what I thought was beyond repair with pressure, being forced into playing as high as I could which was just a high C up to an E and never consistently, just saw this video and revelation just hit, again thank you so much, on to practice CORRECTLY
spent many weeks looking for videos that would show me didderent ways to practise, but this one is the only one that explaims fully what and why i need to be doing certain things
I am absolutely astounded right now. I have been watching a lot of tutorials talking about air and I am glad I have grasped this concept. To hear you give TONS of examples of this concept helped me even more! Thank you James Morrison!
I'm a retired professional clarinettist and I thoroughly enjoyed watching this. The same principle applies whereby you do next to nothing with your embouchure to gain range but rather push air faster through the mouthpiece/reed, even at a piano dynamic, and the high notes come. I can always tell when a student is biting; equivalent to your left arm analogy, as the sound gets shrill and thin. Thanks, James. Cheers!!
I would be interested to know how you play louder. If you are “pushing the air faster” and doing “next to nothing” with your embouchure” to play higher. What do you differently to play louder?
James, I watched what you did at the 8 min. mark and said to myself if I do that, I'll just end up removing the horn from my lip, so I didn't try it. However, I did try my best to relax and slightly move my lips away from the mouthpiece, when I did, I could effortlessly play high F after High F. For years I could only squeeze out a D above high C, but the F was clear and supported by air flow I am still in shock and wondered if yesterday was a dream, I can't wait to get out of work and try again today. A whole new dimension opened to me!! I've experienced this before on the Piccolo trumpet; I had to back off to 60% of my air flow and not press with the horn to hit the high notes due to the piccolo's built in resistance (it seemed so backwards). But I have a Schilke X3 large bore, so I figured if I backed off on air like the piccolo nothing would come out; I guess I just didn't need as much air when my posture and embouchure were relaxed?? One question: Why does a High F on a B-flat piccolo sound higher than the same note on a B-flat trumpet, aren't they the same note?? Thanks for revolutionizing my playing in one session, I'll let you know in 6 months were it has taken me!! 🎺🎺🎺
I've heard so many different overall things relating certain excersizes to increased range and endurance, and while I do believe those excersizes are useful in building the muscles and muscle memory, this video has shown the actual aspects and basic variables of playing higher/lower versus louder/softer. James Morrison is a phenomenal teacher for this stuff. My only question is about his last comment. That "[anyone] can be one of those screaming trumpets on top of a big band". Does he mean that?
This video has helped me so much since i have braces and for anyone who has played the trumpet with braces knows how painful and hard it is on your lips. I'm so glad i found this video and thank you so much for the good advice.
I played trumpet for over 12 years and never knew this before! I even had several great trumpet instructors, but increasing range never worked for me. My range plateaued senior year of high school and never got better, regardless of how much practice I did. I always knew there was something fundamentally wrong with my techniques/principles but no one could tell me what it was until now. Too bad it's after midnight where I'm at otherwise I'd try this out right now lol. Can't wait to start practicing again
Absolutely outstanding video. That was well worth the 13-14 minutes. I'm a cornet play and am able to play a top C but not comfortably neither is a top A comfortable and I've been playing many many years but this knowledge I have no doubt will help me get more comfortable. Thank you so much.
James Morrison. Great trumpeter and multi instrumentalist. I saw him a few times live in Melbourne. Range and endurance have always been an issue with me and I blamed my soft lips and broad protruding front incisors. During the formative years my teacher(s) never seriously looked at my problem with low endurance and inability to play high. Being musically talented kept me interested but I went thru long periods of trumpet neglect.. Ive been watching a few videos on the subject and I will try to see if I can reassess my embouchure situation. Thanks for posting these informative videos from one of the best musicians in the world.
This is a fantastic explanation of a concept that eludes most players under the professional level. I struggle with range more than any other factor, and this type of approach is exactly what I need to unlock the next level (I think). Big shout out to J.M. for making these videos available to the public!!
It's interesting how I've seen this video a few times but this is the first time it clicked and all just made perfect sense. When the student is ready... !!
you're probably the best teacher in the world ( I've had a few here in Brazil!). I was about to give up. it's not just what you say but how you say it. thank you, thank you!
Awesome information! I am a trombone player, and this is critical for us too! and I've been trying to teach this for many years! Your presentation is much easier to understand and will try to use Your method of teaching it. Air is almost ALWAYS the answer to problems with range, tone and endurance. Trombone has the advantage of a 3 foot tuning slide and we don't have to use our chops as much to adjust for the out of tune overtones, so our endurance is not as dependant on facial muscle strength, but the concepts of controlling air are the same!! thank You. Love hearing You play! Loved Your "Snappy Too" video, wish there were more videos like this!
Compressing the air in your lungs just before tonguing the high note, by consciously pushing the diaphragm mosso upwards. Imagine blowing a very spaghetti thin airstream through the mouth cavity whilst continuing the upward compressing of the diaphragm. And simultaneously following James' embouchure advice, practicing the diaphragm-embouchure coordination will give reliable high range.
As a horn player I came here to understand how to work my embouchure. I laid off the last few months since all the gigs dried up and wanted to get back into it. Thanks for the sage advice.
James Morrison knows where he is going with his wind with the touch of each valve slow are fast.⁷ His high notes are crisp and clear. From Karl Douroux
I am related to the person that played the trumpet and trombone in each hand. Manuel Manetta from New Orleans when I was 6 years old. I am soon to be 68 years old and still working at my age, not in music though. I would like to see James Morrison perform at the Hollyood Bowl when COVID-19 is gone.
I'm a beginner. TOTAL Beginner (but I play piano alright). I bought my first trumpet yesterday and I can play a G above middle C straight away (still wavering a bit making a bad tone but I can hear its a G i'm playing), I could not play middle C at all and I tried to open my lips more to get a lower note and kept on just getting air through the horn and got demoralized very quickly. After watching this, I understand exactly why I can't get that C. I have been blowing fast air instead of the slower air. This has helped me immensely. I would actually like to buy this DVD.
As a sax player this is actually quite eye opening. Playing overtones on saxophone you're supposed to avoid squeezing the reed. This way of looking at trumpet seems to explain it: you want the depth of sound from the reed freely vibrating, so instead of using your embouchure you increase your air speed!
I've possibly learnt more from this video than seven years of Trumpet playing. I'm just sad there's only one like button!
Couldn't have said it better!
I've struggled with playing above the staff for 15 years. I tried this with no warmup and instantly played the best high C to double high C of my life, effortlessly. James is my hero!
Keith urban
Bro I think you are just bad
@@johnpiettro4644 its all about vibration.
move your mouthpiece to a different position, try further up or further down, roll lips in or out, just try. it takes time and time again but eventually you might get there, its all about vibration.
1860 vibrations for a doubble high C
good luck
What with tounge?
@@johnpiettro4644 it will be harder and easier for some, but I believe anybody can have a pretty good upper register. Practice a lot, experiment, make sure to keep bad habits out of your playing such as too much pressure, and you’ll figure it out. Dedication is the key to success.
Best tutorial about range EVER.
This is the only video that can be watched my an absolute beginner or an expert
You sir are a fantastic teacher. I love how you smile and keep an encouraging tone thoroughout. I teach at a University and this is something I want to emulate in my teaching. Thanks for the trumpet techniques also
Pure gold. Pure physics! At ITG Sydney 2010, I saw Andrea Tofanelli playing high notes and I saw James Morrison playing even higher, on a bass trumpet. (When I went overseas in ?1985, some schoolkid took over my trumpet chair in a northern Sydney jazz band - he was much better than me. Guess who. Yes, it was James M.)
What a story!
Brass instruments are pretty universal when physics is concerned. I can play just as high on Tuba as I do on piccolo trumpet. It's all about Aperture Control. Faster Air Speed + Increased Air Pressure + Smaller Vibration Surface (lip length) = Higher Note
@@MrJasonharrelson simply false, the physics here is complete nonsense. The aperture state controls pitch, the air speed does not. Air pressure varies with loudness on a constant pitch, so therefore it does not control pitch. Ad lip "length" is rim to rim, unless you want a weak and puny sound.
No. Not pure physics.
His way of teaching genuinely makes sense and I can understand my issue now, great job and thank you
Wise words from one of the top trumpet player in the world :) We are lucky to have this man continuing history of trumpet.
Great tutorial James! Nobody has ever explained it so simply and clearly. Trumpet teachers all over the world should demand their students view this video. Thanks so much!
This is the clearest and most concise explanation of range with the support of analogies everybody can relate to. Great video
There were so many teachers, there were so many theories about high notes. But perhaps James Morrison's theory is the most credible. Because he really mastered all the brass instruments. If he does, it is so.
I want to experiment with this so badly right now, but it's 10 pm and I don't think my neighbors would appreciate it. :(
Same xD
I've thought those same thoughts. Life can really sometimes get in the way. Can you do it with a practice mute? Do you have a car where you can drive to a parking lot?
If you think outside the box, there are ways to find time to practice. :)
same :P
Caleb Carter get a practice mute, or use a Harmon mute, worked for me 35 yrs ago
Andy Cormier LOL, I almost got a ticket for the parking lot playing, some residents didn't appreciate any noise past 7pm....but the practice mute or Harmon is great
I had James’ DVD until I loaned it to a ‘friend’ and never saw it again so thanks for posting.
There's a reason he/she didn't give it back...
I love this guy. One of the world's great players and charming to boot. So happy to have found these vids.
One of the best series of trumpet tutorials on the Internet. There are dozens of “experts” that offer all kinds of instruction but Mr. Morrison explains it very well, with no arrogance, and achieves instant credibility. Thank you Mr. Morrison!
Just getting back to playing trumpet after several decades. Played for 10 years when I was young, but haven't played since. Your teaching videos are immensely helpful!
The way he explained this just opened a whole new world. Ive heared almost everything he said before, but the way he put it together made me understand all of it! Thank you!
I did a thesis on how a cornet (therefore trumpet) works from a physics point of view. James is right, though he didn’t go a little further to explain the resonant cavity that exists inside your mouth. For low notes, the tongue lowers and throat open up to resonate through the lips at a lower frequency. Higher, the throat closes and the tongue rises to create a smaller resonant cavity. The tongue rising also squeezes the airflow through a narrower opening speeding it up, to vibrate the lips faster as James explained. Trumpet mouthpiece design plays its part, because the cup depth creates another resonant cavity. Hence why 'screamer' mouthpieces are so shallow, creating a smaller high frequency cavity. If you try screaming on a bucket mouthpiece, then you’ll be fighting against the larger cavity here, that wants to resonate more slowly. Try moving your tongue up next time you play, to see what happens. Happy trumpeting
Nice! You and Prof. Faddis have the same approach but coming from different angles. Mark Zauss also does this. And, all three of you have 4+ octaves!
Great stuff!
I have been playing trumpet for over 5 years and I am a lead trumpet, high notes are my absolute passion however I tend not to have good tone when I get to atmospheric notes, he has literally solved my problem within the first 3 minutes of the video! He also explains the logic behind it all, he doesn't just say this is what you should do and how you should do it. This video is crucial to any long term trumpet player, very informational! He did a very good job
What a great teacher and musician. Humorous, serious and priceless. Thanks
Tremendo maestro mi. Saludos. Para ese gran profesor saludos desde santo domingo república dominicana siempre activo y bendiciones
Best instructional video on the internet among any genres
Oh my gosh! Genius!!! Must try right now!!!! Thank you James!!!!!!
James, you are “ the man” . Thanks so much for your advise. Simple and to the point. I will be applying your principals
Brilliant James. I'm a voice teacher and also mentoring young singers/songwriters. I love these tutorials.
Thanks Aussie, from a Kiwi across the Deetch / Dutch.
The next time I take my horn outta its case, will literally be the second time.
So discovering you so early in my brass section career is serendipity to the max.
I’ve found the ideal teacher at the ideal juncture.
I commit myself to aiming to be the ideal student
Was stuck on high C for 4 years. Have been practicing with this in mind and I can play a comfortable double G. Amazing video!
I wish James Morrison was my Uncle who could teach me all of this
This has been the best tutorial for increasing range so far...thank you master James
Thank you so much for your generosity in sharing and promoting the art of playing the trumpet. You have a friend on me. Cheers!
An amazing teacher!
I have heard the same ideas before, but not explained the same way. It makes so much sense and I find myself playing solid high Fs and some double Gs without too much pressure. With my normal embouchure, I'm struggling (and using pressure) to hit a high E.
Now my only concern is being able to take this out of a controlled environment into a "real" playing situation.
Thank you James Morrison!
I just tried this on my (French) horn and was able to nail high F consistently!
Thanks, James!
Mr Morrison, thank you for this video, it has opened up a whole new portal for me, I finally get it. I’ve been playing all my life and have damaged my lips what I thought was beyond repair with pressure, being forced into playing as high as I could which was just a high C up to an E and never consistently, just saw this video and revelation just hit, again thank you so much, on to practice CORRECTLY
Great information James, thanks for sharing so much over the years!
spent many weeks looking for videos that would show me didderent ways to practise, but this one is the only one that explaims fully what and why i need to be doing certain things
I’ve played trumpet for about 11 months now and I’ve struggled to play above a high B, thanks James
Mr. Talent !! Also a great teacher. Incredible :-)
I am absolutely astounded right now. I have been watching a lot of tutorials talking about air and I am glad I have grasped this concept. To hear you give TONS of examples of this concept helped me even more! Thank you James Morrison!
I'm a retired professional clarinettist and I thoroughly enjoyed watching this. The same principle applies whereby you do next to nothing with your embouchure to gain range but rather push air faster through the mouthpiece/reed, even at a piano dynamic, and the high notes come. I can always tell when a student is biting; equivalent to your left arm analogy, as the sound gets shrill and thin. Thanks, James. Cheers!!
I would be interested to know how you play louder. If you are “pushing the air faster” and doing “next to nothing” with your embouchure” to play higher.
What do you differently to play louder?
Thank you so much!!!! I'm going to try this today..👍👍
James, I watched what you did at the 8 min. mark and said to myself if I do that, I'll just end up removing the horn from my lip, so I didn't try it. However, I did try my best to relax and slightly move my lips away from the mouthpiece, when I did, I could effortlessly play high F after High F. For years I could only squeeze out a D above high C, but the F was clear and supported by air flow I am still in shock and wondered if yesterday was a dream, I can't wait to get out of work and try again today. A whole new dimension opened to me!!
I've experienced this before on the Piccolo trumpet; I had to back off to 60% of my air flow and not press with the horn to hit the high notes due to the piccolo's built in resistance (it seemed so backwards). But I have a Schilke X3 large bore, so I figured if I backed off on air like the piccolo nothing would come out; I guess I just didn't need as much air when my posture and embouchure were relaxed??
One question: Why does a High F on a B-flat piccolo sound higher than the same note on a B-flat trumpet, aren't they the same note??
Thanks for revolutionizing my playing in one session, I'll let you know in 6 months were it has taken me!! 🎺🎺🎺
I am just beginning 9th grade. I decided to look up some videos to help me hit higher notes with more ease. This has helped a lot!
I am so glad I found this video. Completely changed my thought process
Just great fantastic show.thanks Phillip
James Morrison is a great MASTER and a fantastic Player
I’m a freshman and I was stuck not being able to hit a double G for 3 months until I found this and this saved me so much.
I've heard so many different overall things relating certain excersizes to increased range and endurance, and while I do believe those excersizes are useful in building the muscles and muscle memory, this video has shown the actual aspects and basic variables of playing higher/lower versus louder/softer. James Morrison is a phenomenal teacher for this stuff. My only question is about his last comment. That "[anyone] can be one of those screaming trumpets on top of a big band". Does he mean that?
Clarion Hall217 I think so, although it will take some people more time and practice then others
great question...Chet Baker was never a screamer
Chet wasn't a screamer because he didn't want to be. He perfected the smokey, melancholy tone.
Anyone can be ...
If [he/she] knows the principles and how to do it.
@@da11king bro you're everywhere. I already commented about how I saw you on another video. such a small world
This video has helped me so much since i have braces and for anyone who has played the trumpet with braces knows how painful and hard it is on your lips. I'm so glad i found this video and thank you so much for the good advice.
I played trumpet for over 12 years and never knew this before! I even had several great trumpet instructors, but increasing range never worked for me. My range plateaued senior year of high school and never got better, regardless of how much practice I did. I always knew there was something fundamentally wrong with my techniques/principles but no one could tell me what it was until now. Too bad it's after midnight where I'm at otherwise I'd try this out right now lol. Can't wait to start practicing again
A real Gentleman! Thank you for posting this video which contains a lot of information of great value!
Absolutely outstanding video. That was well worth the 13-14 minutes. I'm a cornet play and am able to play a top C but not comfortably neither is a top A comfortable and I've been playing many many years but this knowledge I have no doubt will help me get more comfortable. Thank you so much.
You are One of the best trumpet player in the world! 🇺🇸
James Morrison. Great trumpeter and multi instrumentalist. I saw him a few times live in Melbourne. Range and endurance have always been an issue with me and I blamed my soft lips and broad protruding front incisors. During the formative years my teacher(s) never seriously looked at my problem with low endurance and inability to play high. Being musically talented kept me interested but I went thru long periods of trumpet neglect.. Ive been watching a few videos on the subject and I will try to see if I can reassess my embouchure situation. Thanks for posting these informative videos from one of the best musicians in the world.
Thanks Phil for posting these, really good guidance.
This is a fantastic explanation of a concept that eludes most players under the professional level. I struggle with range more than any other factor, and this type of approach is exactly what I need to unlock the next level (I think). Big shout out to J.M. for making these videos available to the public!!
This guy is the best ive only been playing my trumpet for a couple months and i already can play above high c and every note below high c
he explained it so great
how is that possible!? you must have perfect embouchure
It's interesting how I've seen this video a few times but this is the first time it clicked and all just made perfect sense. When the student is ready... !!
Perfectly right explained and in short simple form! You don't need to know more about to play high on trumpet and yes....it's a bit practice involved!
you're probably the best teacher in the world ( I've had a few here in Brazil!). I was about to give up. it's not just what you say but how you say it. thank you, thank you!
Man that is some incredibly good teaching.
Fantastic. I have struggled for range for a long time. Basically because I believed it just had to be hard. It's totally a change of mindset.
Awesome information! I am a trombone player, and this is critical for us too! and I've been trying to teach this for many years! Your presentation is much easier to understand and will try to use Your method of teaching it. Air is almost ALWAYS the answer to problems with range, tone and endurance. Trombone has the advantage of a 3 foot tuning slide and we don't have to use our chops as much to adjust for the out of tune overtones, so our endurance is not as dependant on facial muscle strength, but the concepts of controlling air are the same!! thank You. Love hearing You play! Loved Your "Snappy Too" video, wish there were more videos like this!
Compressing the air in your lungs just before tonguing the high note, by consciously pushing the diaphragm mosso upwards.
Imagine blowing a very spaghetti thin airstream through the mouth cavity whilst continuing the upward compressing of the diaphragm.
And simultaneously following James' embouchure advice, practicing the diaphragm-embouchure coordination will give reliable high range.
As a horn player I came here to understand how to work my embouchure. I laid off the last few months since all the gigs dried up and wanted to get back into it. Thanks for the sage advice.
I've watched this 5/6 times and I just keep learning things
James Morrison knows where he is going with his wind with the touch of each valve slow are fast.⁷ His high notes are crisp and clear. From Karl Douroux
I am related to the person that played the trumpet and trombone in each hand. Manuel Manetta from New Orleans when I was 6 years old. I am soon to be 68 years old and still working at my age, not in music though. I would like to see James Morrison perform at the Hollyood Bowl when COVID-19 is gone.
This is so much what I want to hear. Great!
listen to this man....he Knows what to do.
This is great teaching. I don't play anymore wish I knew this back then. My grandfather bunny berigan I am sure use it this way.
Great tutorial but a large area was covered giving do's and don'ts. I would have liked to hear a final summary just with the do's.
I wish I had a chance to look at this 40 years ago :-)
This blew my mind
The best tutorial on brass i've ever had!
Im a beginner and i learned much from you. Well explained!😊
Holly Molly this tutorial is so on point
Thank you
You nailed it, you described exactly my problem
Can’t wait to try this, thank you!!
Joe
Muito obrigado pelo video! E ajudou demais. Obrigado, obrigado!
Great analogies to explain the concept
I'm a beginner. TOTAL Beginner (but I play piano alright). I bought my first trumpet yesterday and I can play a G above middle C straight away (still wavering a bit making a bad tone but I can hear its a G i'm playing), I could not play middle C at all and I tried to open my lips more to get a lower note and kept on just getting air through the horn and got demoralized very quickly. After watching this, I understand exactly why I can't get that C. I have been blowing fast air instead of the slower air. This has helped me immensely. I would actually like to buy this DVD.
I have been playing for awhile, and I have that same problem with high notes.thank you I'll try your idea.
Genius and great teacher 👏👏👏🎺🎺🎺
As a sax player this is actually quite eye opening. Playing overtones on saxophone you're supposed to avoid squeezing the reed. This way of looking at trumpet seems to explain it: you want the depth of sound from the reed freely vibrating, so instead of using your embouchure you increase your air speed!
This Tutorial's great, been playing the trumpet for 50 days now and suddenly my higher notes are much more consistent and fatter.
Omg this is actually super super helpful!
The way he explains how the embouchure works is mind blowing!
Fantastic explanation!!!
This looks like gold. Need to try tomorrow (because it’s 11pm and I don’t want to scare anybody)
Excellent! I'm encouraged to change my ways...
Thanks so much, I always played a high note and than pulled back the trumpet 🎺
You are so awesome!!!
This man is a genius
I love this guy.
Excellent advice from the Master!
FANTASTIC JIM.... Thank you
he´s is relly good teacher
thanks james
Incredibly insightful.
Brilliant teacher! Wish I had studied with James in high school.
0:20
"Trumpeters can do anything"
Try to do a cool sounding Glissando. That's what I thought.
This message is approved by the Trombone community.
Really interesting and well presented.