Amersham Band
Amersham Band
  • Видео 105
  • Просмотров 148 235
An Amersham Suite - The Cricket Match
The Cricket Match celebrates the first record of Amersham Band in 1843. Composed and Narrated by Mike Sheppard
Performed by Amersham Band
Просмотров: 307

Видео

Amersham Band Tubatastic Crowdfunder
Просмотров 1522 года назад
Our Christmas 2022 Crowdfunder video
Whit Friday 2022 - Sweet Dreams
Просмотров 3042 года назад
Our march-down in Delph
Whit Friday 2022 - Simoraine
Просмотров 3132 года назад
Whit Friday 2022 - Simoraine
AmershAm-azing Concert
Просмотров 1823 года назад
Trailer for our concert with Amersham A Cappella - Christmas 2021
Amersham Street Band
Просмотров 3693 года назад
Our small brass group suitable for parties, weddings and private events
Epic Brass!
Просмотров 5303 года назад
Trailer for our Epic Brass Concert with Tredegar Town Band
AB Big Band Workshop
Просмотров 4333 года назад
Our inaugural Big Band session led by Ash Horton
Amersham Band Brass Roots - Colonel Bogey
Просмотров 2993 года назад
Entry to Foden's Virtual Whit Friday March Contest 2021
Amersham Band - Unconquered
Просмотров 4723 года назад
Entry to Foden's Virtual Whit Friday March Contest 2021
Amersham Community Brass - Barnard Castle
Просмотров 5013 года назад
Entry to Foden's Virtual Whit Friday March Contest 2021
Amersham Concert Brass - The Contestor
Просмотров 4143 года назад
Entry to Foden's Virtual Whit Friday March Contest 2021
Blues Brothers Bonanza
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.3 года назад
Our entry to the Cory Online Championships 2021
AB Christmas Crowdfunder
Просмотров 2164 года назад
AB Christmas Crowdfunder
Bensheim 2019
Просмотров 1434 года назад
30th Anniversary celebrations with Bensheim - Amersham Freudeskreis
Bensheim 2019 - We Wish You a Merry Christmas
Просмотров 3024 года назад
Bensheim 2019 - We Wish You a Merry Christmas
Ian Porthouse - Conducting - Band Sound
Просмотров 2184 года назад
Ian Porthouse - Conducting - Band Sound
Ian Porthouse - Preparing a band for a contest
Просмотров 1784 года назад
Ian Porthouse - Preparing a band for a contest
Ian Porthouse Managing Rehearsals
Просмотров 1114 года назад
Ian Porthouse Managing Rehearsals
Ian Porthouse - Getting a Great Performance
Просмотров 2694 года назад
Ian Porthouse - Getting a Great Performance
Lynda Nicholson - Running a Youth Band
Просмотров 1774 года назад
Lynda Nicholson - Running a Youth Band
Lynda Nicholson - Practice - Maintaining Your Technique
Просмотров 1074 года назад
Lynda Nicholson - Practice - Maintaining Your Technique
Lynda Nicholson - Being a Woman in the Band
Просмотров 1294 года назад
Lynda Nicholson - Being a Woman in the Band
Lynda Nicholson - Coping with the Principal Chair
Просмотров 1664 года назад
Lynda Nicholson - Coping with the Principal Chair
Mark Wilkinson - Attracting Audiences
Просмотров 354 года назад
Mark Wilkinson - Attracting Audiences
Mark Wilkinson - Practice Routine
Просмотров 3094 года назад
Mark Wilkinson - Practice Routine
Mark Wilkinson - Playing a Solo Entry
Просмотров 1814 года назад
Mark Wilkinson - Playing a Solo Entry
Mark Wilkinson - Organising the Cornet Section
Просмотров 3844 года назад
Mark Wilkinson - Organising the Cornet Section
Philip Smith - Interview with Paul Fisher
Просмотров 7 тыс.4 года назад
Philip Smith - Interview with Paul Fisher
Philip Smith - Working with Conductors
Просмотров 1,7 тыс.4 года назад
Philip Smith - Working with Conductors

Комментарии

  • @bendetoy3685
    @bendetoy3685 5 месяцев назад

    He mentioned the Spike Jones trumpet Player at the end of the recording. It was George Rock.

  • @MichaelFottrell-b5v
    @MichaelFottrell-b5v 5 месяцев назад

    Great sound. The energy was palpable! Wonderful in outdoor conditions. Well done!

  • @mikehamnett9336
    @mikehamnett9336 5 месяцев назад

    The air compression is the key thing but not the only thing but if the air isn’t right, everything else falls off the cliff. Someone once said that brass playing is no harder than deep breathing. I think they were onto something.

  • @BrassBro-Science-ys7sg
    @BrassBro-Science-ys7sg 7 месяцев назад

    He claims his lips don't change to play higher. RIGHT......

  • @christopherbarker181
    @christopherbarker181 7 месяцев назад

    I’m glad to hear that Phil had some anger because I am going through this right now. I played for the Lord for fifty years and started to have lip problems that I blamed on misaligned teeth. At the age of 68 I decided to get braces and that might have been a bad choice. I have nice straight teeth now but after initial early satisfactory progress, I’m having a terrible time getting my sound back and comfortable on the mouthpiece. I have faith and I won’t give up but I am definitely depressed. 🙁🙏🤔😊

  • @allwinds3786
    @allwinds3786 7 месяцев назад

    I had my 6 upper front teeth crowned, and now I believe I have severe distonia.

  • @nickdefunk
    @nickdefunk 8 месяцев назад

    This is really good stuff!!!! I was surprised he didn’t mention interval studies but maybe it falls in one of the other categories?

  • @stephenjablonsky1941
    @stephenjablonsky1941 9 месяцев назад

    How interesting it is that life took Phil to the top of the mountain and now he is in the valley looking up in total amazement at the ride he has been on. Be grateful for being alive and for all the blessings that have been sent your way.

  • @curt-7259
    @curt-7259 9 месяцев назад

    The fact that you empower players in the band to fix intonation issues themselves, is an excellent way to delegate responsibility.

  • @christopherblades6110
    @christopherblades6110 10 месяцев назад

    Looking good Gordon .. love to you and Yvonne 🌹

  • @clemensmuller4794
    @clemensmuller4794 10 месяцев назад

    Spot on.

  • @joeenglert
    @joeenglert 10 месяцев назад

    i have that and it made me go from a pro clarinetist to a music teacher as my embouchure had no endurance

  • @davidmoulton611
    @davidmoulton611 11 месяцев назад

    I played at the leyland daft band with Ian. An amazing player. I was playing percussion

  • @RW-ob4en
    @RW-ob4en 11 месяцев назад

    Ouch. “Why do they call it Indian giver? The phrase was first noted in 1765 by Thomas Hutchinson, who characterized an Indian gift as "a present for which an equivalent return is expected," which suggests that the phrase originally referred to a simple exchange of gifts.”

  • @RW-ob4en
    @RW-ob4en 11 месяцев назад

    “…just forget what you know, go back to being 7 and not knowing anything. You might know too much…” My very thought today as I walked (slinked) away from my practice session.

  • @josezarzo2607
    @josezarzo2607 11 месяцев назад

    Thanks so much for your thoughts Philip! One of the greatest Symphony trumpeters ever!❤️

  • @WINDOWLICKERGT
    @WINDOWLICKERGT Год назад

    Lynda, you were my first music teacher in Rainhill and was in the SHYBB for a few years. Loved my time with you at Ruskin drive.

  • @MendelssohnPerez-x9i
    @MendelssohnPerez-x9i Год назад

    There is a cure for all of that. I am a person who pass true that symptom and I understand the concern of many players under this condition with the only difference that at the time it happened to me I was professional frelancer with big name with my musical genre with a good ears enough to understand music medicine and technology. It took me time getting well informed and trying to organize a very understandable language for anybody with this condition. As physician grand son I sat down to understand it. Believe or not it is a communication issue and it is a lot better understand the direction of solution or make it disappear than trying to be rehabilitating under a alternative or new playing direction because with the second choice the issue still in your organism. But gets what I am coming with the widest info about it and a technology artifact that will disappear it naturally. Again it is a communication problem between music medicine and technology. for 100's of years our career pedagogy or philosophy is no wrong but incomplete. I hope you see me with the best for us soon.

  • @hernanroses
    @hernanroses Год назад

    Thank you!!!

  • @ScratchySlide
    @ScratchySlide Год назад

    Well I learned absolutely nothing there...

  • @da11king
    @da11king Год назад

    Cant be just about the air 🤨

    • @BrassBro-Science-ys7sg
      @BrassBro-Science-ys7sg 7 месяцев назад

      It's not. They all say the same thing and it is the same standard nonsense.

    • @da11king
      @da11king 7 месяцев назад

      @BrassBro-Science-ys7sg what should it be then? 👅? 🤨

  • @guidovanhaalen4432
    @guidovanhaalen4432 Год назад

    the trombone soloist is recording herself............. ♫♪☺♥

  • @guidovanhaalen4432
    @guidovanhaalen4432 Год назад

    Robert Schumann Quote : Composing something real unique is writing down a melody/set of notes that no one else ever had done before.... ♫♪

  • @sophiehorne3656
    @sophiehorne3656 Год назад

    Love this! Beautiful playing. Loved my time at Amersham.

  • @yvoncormier9762
    @yvoncormier9762 Год назад

    Did you work for Amersham? If so, did you know Jo Jo/AKA Rich Freeman? He played sax.

  • @MrHazelRah
    @MrHazelRah Год назад

    Beautiful testimony. God bless you, Phil.

  • @judieunplugged
    @judieunplugged Год назад

    i grew up a few doors down from Jimmy and was friends with his sons. A larger than life character and sorely missed.

  • @paulyouphone2793
    @paulyouphone2793 Год назад

    My favourite piece for brass - played very well - great lead - (but perhaps just slightly too fast for my liking :-) - Thanks!!

  • @kevinhateswriting
    @kevinhateswriting Год назад

    As a comeback player I find Phil's experience and fortitude so inspiring.

  • @65strad
    @65strad Год назад

    A real gentleman and a most humble trumpet legend

  • @borisdavidov5
    @borisdavidov5 Год назад

    I don't believe it has to do anything with God to pull this from Phil. I personally think that this is inefficiency came from facial muscles disbalance that led into this which some would got earlier and some later in their career. Don't get me wrong Phil is and always will be the great example for many. I accidentally discovered Claude Gordon and his approach on playing the trumpet. Not to mentioned CG is very particular interms of leaps, stating that we need forget about the lips since its only job to vibrate, thus tongue forming the pitch and the air doing the rest...Phil, take a look at his stuff you will be miles ahead and will sound even better! God bless you! James 1:13 " When under trial, let no one say: “I am being tried by God.” For with evil things God cannot be tried, nor does he himself try anyone. "

  • @yxcqwertzuiopu9423
    @yxcqwertzuiopu9423 Год назад

    fokal dystonia is so hard to deal with - if you dont had it you cant imagine

  • @dancecompetition3691
    @dancecompetition3691 Год назад

    Phil is God’s faithful trumpeter! With the best sound ever recorded in the genre! Thank God for him

  • @mikekaupa9190
    @mikekaupa9190 Год назад

    Thank you!

  • @alexandruurdnaxela2881
    @alexandruurdnaxela2881 Год назад

    Why he lifts up the instrument?

  • @chasefreak
    @chasefreak Год назад

    Mr. Schilke & "Doc" Reinhardt BOTH advocated using the whoooo no tongue air attacks-this increases embouchure vibrating fluency

  • @williamharris1131
    @williamharris1131 Год назад

    Thank you for your words Phil and I feel your pain as well as shedding many tearful moments also! I too suffer from Embouchure Dystonia and it has been very distressing to have had to "retire" because of "chop problems" after 49 yrs of performing (Principal Trombone) with the Syracuse Symphony in 2009. [By the way, I was a member of the USMA West Point Army Band from 1963 to 1966] I have tried to work through this by myself, by going back to the Fundamentals, which has worked sometimes but however with too much inconsistency, making playing professionally impossible due to the absence of a "reliable" response. I have Lucinda's books and have yet to reach out to Jan, which I may or for that matter - should do - but I keep thinking I might be able work this out by myself by some miracle happening, which to date, has not happened. I, too, am totally bewildered as to "how it happened" and hope and pray that some "miracle" will occur. If it does - AWESOME - if it doesn't - well - It's been a great ride and I am very grateful to God for the many successful years I have had! golfbone200@gmail.com

  • @peter1.f.t.p275
    @peter1.f.t.p275 2 года назад

    The advice here is very much misleading and it shouldn't be distributed and sends people off on the wrong path. Particularly the breathing. If you like me to elaborate on this you can always write to me. Kind regards, Peter

  • @СергейКоролев-ь4ф
    @СергейКоролев-ь4ф 2 года назад

    Перевод на русский, спасибо

  • @СергейКоролев-ь4ф
    @СергейКоролев-ь4ф 2 года назад

    Перевод

  • @jazztrumpet-8246
    @jazztrumpet-8246 2 года назад

    I’ve been playing for about 30 years and now I am beginning to listen to classical trumpet playing intensely. I am mostly a Salsa, Merengue, Latin Jazz, Funk etc… trumpeter. I’ve always enjoyed listening to classical but now I’ve opened my heart to knowing to intricacies of this beautiful music. My practicing consists of (everyday) long tones, scales, slurs, and tonguing. That is it. Of course I do practice the music that will be played for the upcoming event. But that is it. I’ve never done buzzing and did not do anything that will hurt me. I really appreciate Phil’s honesty and humility. I also appreciate his reverence and humbleness towards God. Thank you.

  • @violinbuff3782
    @violinbuff3782 2 года назад

    I remember you from Juilliard when I was a trumpet major viola minor. I do not play trumpet these days and focused on viola more. We all knew you were such a fine player. Great that you continue to inspire younger players. Sorry you have to deal with dystonia and yet I sense an overall humility in the face of music and of life and surely the experience brings a profound perspective to your teaching!. Bravo on the very fine interview. Eric Shumsky

  • @Kennygrooms
    @Kennygrooms 2 года назад

    What a great man...and a great man of God. He's an even better Christian than he is a trumpet player...if that's possible lol

  • @lpcruz5661
    @lpcruz5661 2 года назад

    A so touching testimony. Amen.

  • @thomassicard3733
    @thomassicard3733 2 года назад

    The greatest recordings and performances in brass playing (that I have ever heard) were American brass players, Austrian brass players and Swedish brass players. Maybe I am too subjective, but whatever. If you don't have mastery of judicious use of tounge-stopping and "thing-in-the-sound" sound core... well fart on ya.

  • @thomassicard3733
    @thomassicard3733 2 года назад

    The GREAT American brass players have the same thing in common with the GREAT Austrian brass players... COMPACT, FOCUSED, SERIOUS "thing in the sound" CORE, and... TOUNGUE-STOPPING. British? Not so much.

  • @thomassicard3733
    @thomassicard3733 2 года назад

    Mouthpiece buzzing. Lip with no mouthpiece (or horn) buzzing. ... Yeah. I ALWAYS knew it was total bullshit.

  • @AlexandreFerreira-lj4dp
    @AlexandreFerreira-lj4dp 2 года назад

    "Been There Done That" I Praise the Lord because this is a great testimony. Took me years to find out that I suffered from FTSED and Dale Warren and Jan Kaagarice put me back on track. Today, after 27 years, through tears and Joy, God always provided and taught me how to help people in Brazil to recover from it. God, Good Doctors, love and friends

  • @musicofnote1
    @musicofnote1 2 года назад

    No, c'mon. EVERYONE knows you MUST buzz. Buzz, Buzz, Buzz. Well, buzzing with some of the best teachers killed my trumpet playing. My throat closed such, that I couldn't play anything anymore. 9 years of not playing and I decided to play again, but NOT trumpet. So I picked up a trombone. 1991 I started with a guy who didn't want to hear buzzing didn't want to hear scales. He told me "Go for the sound. If the sound is good, chances are you're doing it right." Got my teaching certificate for tenor and euphonium in 1996. In 1995 I even stopped playing tenor and switched to bass EXCEPT for my final exam pieces which I played on the tenor and that was just about the last time I played tenor. Played bass in a trombone quartet for almost 20 years and a local orchestra as bass trombonist for 5 years. I do not do any buzzing. The closest I come to exercises is starting a kind a chicowiz exercise to start with a great sound in the middle and expand in both directions at the same time, just going for the great bass trombone sound. But no buzzing.

  • @johnwilder8517
    @johnwilder8517 2 года назад

    Amazing video. It takes a big, big man to put this out there. Doing His work. jw