Thanks. I picked up a trumpet recently for fun, having never had any lessons. No teachers within 1000km of where I live and I know no one playing trumpet! Glad I saw this early on in trumpet journey!
I've spent so long trying to fix my embouchure. I'm a French horn player who has been struggling with my trumpet for my high school jazz band and I saw this video and was immediately able to play a high c. I couldn't ask for a better Christmas gift. Thank you so much and have a blessed day
Add one more player "saved," but different. When I was 15, playing well (tho I don't remember if I was doing it right), a guy threw a baseball batt and knocked out my front teeth - 3 on top and 2 on bottom. Broke 'em off at the gum line. (I was laughing at the time of impact, so my lips were basically spared.) I quit playing. Now, 61 years later (yeah, I'm 76), I've bought a cheap cornet because I just want to play again. I found your embouchure teachings two days ago just as I've been able to get the first clean 1st octave G, and now the sun has broken through with angels' voices and I see the way ahead. Thanks! I got your ebook, will get your albums and am working on it! Thanks a million!
These lesson are worth their weight in gold. I played horn very easily from 2nd grade on, but no one ever showed me proper embouchure which led later to not being able to play through the entire range and early fatigue. Bless you Charlie.
Charlie, wish I had you as a teacher when I played in high school. This is exactly what I did and ended up with a split upper lip, pain and a drastic reduction in my playing. Went from 1st chair in junior high/playing 1st trumpet to playing 3rd and a lot of angst. Then went through some painful abdominal surgery as a Junior to boot. Thought of quitting but stuck it out. I’ve got medium sized lips but did it to improve my range, which I never really had to my satisfaction. Had some good teachers, but they never pointed this out. Now I’m retired and in my 60’s and have picked up the horn again and use your videos as a foundation for practice. I think I’m playing better now than when I was a kid, so thanks for that!
I remember doing this when I first started playing. The music teacher we had in school would not stop complaining that us 1st and 2nd year trumpet players couldn't hit the 2nd octave F in songs, we just had to find a way to do it so he would damn well shut up about it, and I did, by doing exactly what you described. Moved the mouthpiece down, so it went to the red part of my upper lip and bam, instant higher notes. Didn't find out til years later that it had destroyed my ability to play for any extended length of time and getting anything beyond a 3rd octave D felt impossible. Top this off with living in a small town with no brass teacher and with every other brass teacher I came across not wanting to teach me until I had "fixed" this problem. Not one of them even attempted to provide any kind of solution to this, much less how to properly form an embouchure properly in the first place. It got to a point where I just couldn't improve anymore and having to try and figure out everything on my own as an adolescent, I just gave up on playing the instrument. And here I am, liking and hating the instrument at the same time. I sometimes think about what I could have actually done with it if I had been taught properly
Yes come on! Im going through an embouchure change right now because of this ,its so so difficult. I'd been playing with half my top lip in for 10 years and it was partly coz of my teeth but not I got them fixed and im working on the new embouchure. I can slowly feel it getting better ,its definitely so so frustrating at times ,but it will be worth it
Wyatt I'm right there with you -- I haven't played in 30 years and I'm constantly taunted by all the fantastic insight I get from these tremendous players all over youtube. IF ONLY.. IF ONLY. I knew some of these things way back then. I had one college teacher that maybe touched on some of the techniques --- having me hold the horn in the palm of my hand without any pressure and learning to get to the high notes - albeit without any power -- but even that --- was not near the advice that I've gotten on line. Unfortunately I live in a quiet development with thin walls and my neighbors would not appreciate this 57 year old learning how to play trumpet again. lol
Just wanted to mention some basic vibration theory: Basically every physical object will vibrate to some degree. Some physical objects have more internal damping and will vibrate less (like Jell-O). But more solid objects have 2 essential properties for vibration: stiffness and mass. In mechanical engineering everything is simplified to make mathematical predictions as easy as possible, the basic vibration model is a point mass on the end of a spring that is grounded on the other end. The natural vibration frequency of the mass bouncing on the spring is sqrt(stiffness/mass). So the frequency increases as stiffness increases and decreases as mass increases. There are 2 opposing forces in the system, one is the spring force pushing or pulling on the mass, the other is the inertia force of the mass as it accelerates (which is happening constantly back and forth). The 2 forces are equal except when forced or there is a lot of energy dissapation in the system (there's always some). So your lips are like this except the stiffness and mass are distributed over the region of your embouchure. There are a lot of ideas proposed for how the lips change frequency and I suggest it is more complex than a guitar string because with a guitar string you change the length that is vibrating, what this does is reduce the mass that's vibrating, and the stiffness is not changed, it's set by the tuning. With the trumpet, to play a note most efficiently, the lip frequency should match the acoustic frequency of the horn as closely as possible (set mostly by the tube length). The amount of tissue that's vibrating determines the mass, and the lip tension determines the stiffness, and the mass and stiffness determine the natural frequency the lips want to vibrate at when forced by air pressure. The trickiest thing, I think about the trumpet, may be the interplay among variables in the embouchure system, mainly between mass and stiffness. When you modulate your embouchure you effect both the mass and stiffness simultaneously. When you tense your lips you also reduce the amount of tissue (mass) that is moving in the vibration. Changing mp placement, as Charlie covers very well here, also changes the stiffness and mass of the embouchure system. There's an infinite number of ways you can place and tense your lips, compared to a guitar, which can be bit more limited due to the mechanics of the frets but of course people have found ways to be very expressive on the guitar by other means. The trumpet IMHO is more expressive, and it more closely emulates the voice due to being similar to the vocal cords.
Damn i was genuinely wondering about the physics of lip vibration during this video. So glad you could give such a detailed explanation thats awesome. One thing im comfused about tho, you said when you tense the lips the stiffness is increaed but the mass of tissue vibrating is decreased. If the lips are tensed, wouldnt there be the same volume of lip vibration since mouthpiece has a fixed cross sectional area, whilst the density of the tensed lips is higher than loose lips, thus increasing the vibrational mass??
@@lp9931 I dont know about lip phyics specificslly but do know about theories of vibration, I think what's likely true is that the stiffness and mass vary constantly and vary between players. When you tense your lips the amount of vibrating tissue varies along with the stiffness. If you use a smile embouchure for instance maybe there is less surrounding tissue vibrating when tensing.
I mean, that and the AIR… You can keep the embouchure constant and still move through several partials just by changing the air. It’s a very complex system to model. Woodwinds, for example, manage without changing the modulus/stiffness if the reed. Granted, they have register keys (flute excluded) to encourage higher harmonics.
That was it. I marked the time with my original "bingo" 2 weeks ago. The progress, in 2 weeks, is that I moved from a very painful high A and an endurance of 60 minutes, to double high D and collapsing after 2 hours. With an Artisan 3C. Well my teacher thought I wasn't using enough air, so I always had to blow the Greek Gods of Wind through that piece of metal. I'm still adjusting and if I don't pay close attention I play a B flat instead of an F. A 2 mm change opened up the high register for me. The notes were always there, I just couldn't get to them. Now I need to build the muscles and do some target practice. In 6 months I'll be fine. Thank you Mr.Porter. You helped making a fat noob trumpet player happy.
Charlie, I’ve been playing the trumpet for over 65 years, I’m 75 old. I have recovered from a stroke. I didn’t play for some 3 yrs.and looking around for a method to get my chops back in shape. I really like your method and am following it an it seems to be working, thanks for your teaching method, it seems logical and not a gimmick Marc Brandl
Great tutorial! This is such an important factor for success and enjoyment in playing trumpet! I too learned playing in the "red" and my private teachers never addressed any of this with me until I went college. I studied with Roger Murtha at the Hartt School of Music and clocked it. He gave me a choice to switch my major from African -American Music Jazz Trumpet to Music Education to fix the problem or give me a customized set of drills from the Schlossberg, Arban and Clarke books. Well, I chose the later because I loved being around all the jazz legends like Jackie McLean and all the master classes he had with the heroes of jazz. After graduating, Roger recommended I study with Valerie Ponomarev and make transition from in the 'red' to 1/4 up and 1/4 down. I took a little over a year but I'm grateful I did it, and twenty five years later I still keep in touch with Roger and Valerie for I owe them so much! I'm sorry to be long winded Charlie, but your video tutorial reached home to me and thank heaven your putting this out there. As a music educator my self, I make it my business to address mouthpiece placement with all my students and it's a joy to watch them grow! Thank you so much for this video, you're a blessing! Be safe and well, Rob Ravosa
Thanks Charlie, for a very interesting and thought provoking presentation. I’m in my sixties and have been playing since elementary school but remain just average, even on my best days. I’ve not played much during the pandemic, the ensemble that I play with has been inactive but I do need to get back in the practice room, and this certainly give me something to think about.
I had no idea this was even a thing - I'm trying it now and the default note that comes out when I just put air through the trumpet went from a middle G to a high G. I recently got moved up to first in a jazz band I'm and I've been really struggling with the high notes, so thank you so much for this.
I love the fact that you have such a good understanding of this topic and have probably the greatest reasoning and opinion of this super controversial and highly sought after topic for understanding. With this entire video you pretty much covered all the variables of this except for a few very obscure things that I have "discovered" and researched. I play inside the red of my bottom lip and have played like this for 11 years and I use the MF protocol for my preferred embouchure method which is loosening my entire aperture and embouchure. 1. This is mainly a topic for the embouchure type of tightening and pressure changing for different notes: This is the most common and most widely used in almost all the world and there is more information about this than a couple of others out there. 2. The other embouchure types such as loosening your entire embouchure from the corners to your aperture to smiling and widening your embouchure and aperture for different notes and tone qualities aren't the most suited for this topic. Tightening and using the pressure changing method in these types of embouchures are different for them in a lot of different ways. 3. The anatomy of everyone is different may cause more harm than good if this information is used too literally. Most people don't find things easier if change is suggested to a person if they already have an existing use of their embouchure type. 4. Use of information from a teacher about a complete different use of something about your anatomy should be used cautiously and under the supervision of an educator that has extreme experience with what is your preferred method or use of different methods combined for there own use. This information that I have provided is mainly an educated opinion with extensive research over a few years with teachers and students from the state of california and Arizona. Please comment on this about different information and experiences that you have had about anything, I'd love to hear it and help me educate myself and others about it. I love criticism and others who have a lot of information about this highly controversial topic
Great content! Played for years with range issues from playing too much on the red. Took lessons for years and through college, and no one said a word about it. . no one knew how to help. I went through this process (changing embouchure to get OFF the red) in my 30's and my trumpet playing is infinitely better and I really don't have any range limitations. Thank you for providing this instruction and preaching the word!
Thanks a lot for your video ! I have big lips as well, and I always had troubles playing high and maintaining endurance. I realize now that I moved my embouchure to the red when I needed high notes. Anyway, I had a gig last night, I played following your advice, and it worked perfectly! I'm so glad after all those years of hassle
72 yrs old and only 5 yrs into this. I've learned more here about how to from the embouchure than all the lessons --- and --- it's been a tremendous help and assistance. To reiterate the comment below: Thankyou thankyou thankyou!!!!
Lawrence, I'm 63 and have just started playing the cornet again this year, haven't played since I was in my early twenties. I'm learning more from his videos than I ever knew before. I'm still struggling to play, but I'm on the right path and having fun thanks to Charlie Porter's videos. Wishing you the best.
Lawrence & Ricky, I’m 62 and just started back 2 weeks ago. Previously I played for 8 yrs ending when I graduated high school. I too have learned more about the basics from Charlies’ videos than I ever did before or from my current teacher.
My teacher is the best. Unfortunately, I believe, by reading the comments teachers fail to grasp the situation because it's a mere 2 millimeter move on the upper lip (for me) that they just can't see. BTW, I'm 52 and I started playing 4 years ago after a hiatus of 35 years :)
This tip has made a huge improvement in my endurance and high range. I’m a intermediate beginner, and the adjustment time was short (30 mins of long notes and BANG). Much gratitude to Mr Porter for the deep teach.
I'm glad I found your channel! I'm in the American Legion Honor Guard and I'm trying to learn taos on the bugle. I have always been a string instrument musician, and this has been frustrating, but there is nobody in this area who can play bugle.
Damn it...I needed this lesson/revelation about 40 years ago. I played trumpet and marched in drum and bugle corps (SUTA!) and always struggled with endurance and consistent quality in the upper register. Reworking my embouchure with this in mind would have made all the difference, I believe. In any case I'm glad I stumbled onto this if for no other reason than now I know about Charlie Porter and his music.
I don't know how often you check these comments Charlie, but if you do I can't say enough about how helpful this video, as well the others you've produced have helped me through my embouchure change. Your methodology and presentations are logical and precise. Thank you, thank you, thank you!
Due to braces (and wax that I put over braces so they wouldn't cut into my lip) I too started on the red portion of the upper lip. Low notes were good, but anything above a G (top of the staff) was questionable... plus poor endurance. I tried once my own to raise the positioning, but it felt SO unnatural and I had difficulty producing decent sound / tone. Then, several years later, I committed myself to make the change no matter what. Was the BEST thing I could have done. Range... endurance... EVERYTHING improved. I even got a Monette mouthpiece and did even better. Until..... I discovered a Giddings mouthpiece (stainless steel). Experienced even MORE improvement... Endurance... Range... Less pressure... Comfort, etc. And over time the improvement continues. I can now practice for 1.5 hours like it used to be when I practiced for 1 hour. Back in the day, Vincent Bach revolutionized the mouthpiece. It is why the Bach became the standard, "go to" mouthpiece for about 80 years. And it is still very playable.
I got a cornet today to learn on Charlie and so glad I found your video before I begin to learn all the wrong ways of playing ! I'm subbed on you so hoping I can pick up some good skills. Thanks for sharing.
I have big lips like you. I wish I'd known this years ago! I've always struggled with the big RING on the top lip. Probably from too much pressure. Gonna watch your embouchure video now and see how I've been probably doing it wrong for 24 years. My trumpet teacher in college used to try so hard to get me to avoid so much pressure.
Kia ora @Charlie Porter, this is an awesome video - I only wish you had made it 10 years ago! I used to play trumpet on the red throughout highschool with so much frustration, that I thought I should just give up and play euphonium. Once I started undergrad I had it changed and it was the best decision for my playing. That's not to say it was easy though - in fact it was one of the most agonizing things I had to go through! I was supposed to be an undergrad trumpet student, yet it felt like I had to start over with the range of a beginner. One of the things that I had to watch out for was other bad habits that I developed while I was playing in the red. This included not knowing how to use the tongue to change the pitch among many other things. Anyways, I digress. I'm digging these new videos and I'm so gutted I missed out on seeing you here in New Zealand!
Thanks for the explanation. It explains why my trumpet teacher did this to me 35 years ago...I found I have to go into the red to get lower notes as when I went out of the red, I was stuck with a range in the stratosphere with little effort and having trouble getting to the low notes. I'm now having to re-teach myself this after a 20 year holiday from playing trumpet.
Thank you so much Charlis Porter. I am a beginner and as a vocalist and piano player I overstand the importance of learning a good habit as apposed to a bad habit in the beginning approach to any form of music or life. I will continue to follow your teaching method and I pray that you have a beginners class on line or CD. You truly are a fantastic teacher!!! Peace and Love!!!
Thank you Charlie for sharing these videos I have learnt a lot from your videos I watch many of them you have such a good sound I am new to playing just started learning to play I play cornet and trumpet and is all self taught still have a long way to go will keep watching your videos to learn more . Thank you.
Thank you. I just recently decided to see if my lips could play some 40's Swing. Carpal tunnel surgery killed my hands, so I can no longer play my guitars. I've watched every RUclips video on the subject of Trombone & Bugle that have come my way. This one, of yours, popped-up and I realized that it is exactly the kind of information that I need! Thank you for demonstrating LIP PLACEMENT for us. I had no idea, except I realized y'all don't play the thing like a Gazoo! I can make my lips and throat SOUND like a trumpet and a Trombone just by themselves. (The INKSPOTS could do that, too). Just the little bit of trying to make notes and figure out how to BUZZ, shows me how much work goes into training your lips JUST TO BUZZ ! much less training them to make notes that don't sound like Long-tailed cats crying in a room full of rocking chairs! If I live another few months, I'll have lived seven decades. That doesn't sound as bad as stated in years! THANKS AGAIN !!!
Thank you for this valuable content. I am a beginning Trombone player (soon to be Trumpet as well if the cards land right) and trying to set myself up for a strong start. No money for lessons yet, so videos like this are priceless!
Man I really needed to see this video, been struggling with endurance issues lately and I’ve been playing in the red without knowing anything about how bad that was for you. Thanks for the help man 👑🎶🎺
Lucky me discovering your channel! Found out I did it wrong for ages! I am 25 now and taking trumpet back after quiting due to braces. Lifting up my embouchure helped out straight away! Thanks so much sir! This is incredibly helpfull ! Merci
I have played trumpet for 40 years and never been taught embouchure properly despite doing my RSM grades! Thankyou so so much for your video help. First time I have seen your classes today. Now you will help me to become a much better player. Thankyou so much. Fantastic teacher.
Nice Charlie, I read your bio on Wikipedia. I studied at The Mannes School of Music from 1967 thru to 1970. My trumpet teacher who was a trombone player decided I needed to change my embouchure to get "a symphonic sound", even though I had great chops. His advice wrecked my embouchure, not that I even knew what an embouchure was at the time! In my second year, I discovered that a few of the guys were taking lessons outside of school with Roy Stevens (Costello Method), and I studied with him trying to recover my range and flexibility. Unfortunately, it became too frustrating and I gave up. I'm trying to make a bit of a comeback now playing for my own pleasure. Thank you for posting on RUclips... you're a good man "Charlie Brown".
Hey Charlie, thanks so much for making this video. I've since found my own way to this realisation and had probably been partially playing on the red for my whole career. I've recently gone the Maggio route which naturally steered me into a non-red embouchure. Ironically i've always had decent range and edurance, I feel like I've turned a corner. Looking forwrad to getting back to gigging post covid but man, some of the muscles are going to be playing catch up!
Hi Charlie. I listened to your video on the perils of red lip playing and agree entirely. For the first five years of my 55 years of trumpet playing I was doing just that with the rim on my upper lip and my head tipped back. What I found was inconsistency and limitation of range and endurance. I finally became so frustrated that I decided to change my embouchre or give up the instrument entirely! So I started rolling my lips in, bringing my head position into neutral, and imagining blowing straight through the horn (although I have a downstream air flow). After 6-8 months of combating the foreign feel of this new setting, I settled in and have not looked back enjoying improved range and endurance. During that first year I did have one setback splitting the right side of my upper lip during a period of heavy range and fortissimo playing demands. That part of my lip will peel to this day if I overplay with too much pressure (my quality control mechanism, Ha!). One thing I have become conscious of over the years is over pulling at the corners in the upper register which can lead to rapid lip fatigue. This has ameliorated over the past10 months sine I have been grinding my way through the Claude Gordon method with its emphasis on air stream control and modulation. I have been able to relax the corners a bit and play with a bit fuller lip resulting in a warmer more relaxed sound with improved endurance and without any loss of range. One thing I have noticed recently is that occasionally I will get a raspiness in my tone which I formerly never had. Any thoughts there?
As a man who also has very "kissable lips" I've been told simple to make the letter "M" and let the air create the embouchure with the sort of "poo" motion and it's gotten me a long way so far... I'll have to give your "four step method" a try! I initially came here because I have a few colleagues who play "in the red" and I've always been told to avoid but was never told why... Maybe one day if you come on back to the Palm Beach area we can meet for a lesson and a coffee... Thanks again for all the great content!
Watched this as a trombonist and got my mouthpiece out and realised a small portion of the red in my bottom lip was inside the rim, now I'm tucking it in and playing feels better and tone is reliable, thanks! I think I normally vary slightly how I put the mouthpiece to my chops, sometimes the red is all in and sometimes not, but I hadn't thought about this as a thing to worry about!
TKs Charlie, yore a cool cat - I played in HS (HS of Perfornig Arts, NYC) in the 70s. Walked away from the horn and focsed on drama. Some 45 years later I picked up a horn, have no range, and appranetly I'm doign somehting wrong. This embrouchure insight is powerful. tks a ton.
as a former tmea all state trombone player and now principal of a local symphony i was playing in the red until about last year. Was having endurance issues especially playing 1st bone through long symphonies and i used to shift into the red to crank out so high notes above concert g and a flat. I have since changed more to a trumpet style embouchure and man my sound has gone to levels i never thought possible. The change was very frustrating basically learning how to vibrate all over again but well worth it.
Watching this 5 years since i've touched a horn since high school. I remember playing in the red after I got braces and it improved my tone and range, but after an hour my lips were shot. I was 3rd chair and played in the jazz band.
Thank you ... I've been working the mouth pieces of trumpet, tuba, and baritone with tremendous success when I go back to the instrument. I had no idea how to work the lips so they formed the skin of a drum.
Thanks, Charlie this video was very helpful. I did not have a teacher starting out so i formed the habit of playing in the red. i now have to go back in time and learn how to place the mouthpiece. properly
Great vid Charlie. I too played in the red previously. One time I played some short pieces in a Phil Smith masterclass and he suggested move the mouthpiece u p! I waited 5 yrs to do it but once I did it made a huge difference. I really had hit a wall with my playing and could no longer play a long gig.... Took me another 2 yrs to feel natural that way but well worth it....should've done as a teenager.
I’m so glad I found this vid. I thought that playing in the red meant the inside of your mouth. It makes so much sense. My lips were always beat up when I played because I was out too much pressure the only red of my lips. To try and combat that I puffed my cheeks so my lips wouldn’t hurt. Then my corners got really fatigued which is what I’m struggling with now and they get really sore. My endurance is so bad. I’m glad I can fix this while I’m still a freshman.
Such good content. Wish I had heard this message when I was 15, well before the days of RUclips! Playing in the top lip destroyed my trumpet playing and I’m now focused on trombone. Interestingly I have Invisalign which are removable braces and when do play the trumpet my range is way better with the braces in, no idea why.
Hello, Charlie! I'm your subscriber from Ukraine and I watched the most of your videos and I delighted with them! I've playing the trumpet for 18 years and in my childhood I played at my top lip and the bottom lip was under the top, but I played well. Then, I had the problems in college, because my lips had grown up, and I changed my set up, unfortunately unsuccessfully. Now, I'm trying your four-step setting up, but my lips are very uncontrollable and after practice I usually have a scar from the teeth on back of the top lip. Sorry for my English and I would be glad for any tips or advices from you, thank you!!!
When started my upper lip would slid up. The upper red would be on my mouthpiece rim. Endurance went out the door. Octaves were non-existence. It wasn’t until I read an article about the Rubber-ban muscle, with an illustration, around the lips. The article went on to say the inner rim diameter of the mouthpiece must be slightly over the outer edge of the lips. It also said not to have too much of the outer upper embouchure in the mouthpiece. When I began practicing this new mouthpiece positioning, my octaves went from a struggle high C to C4. My endurance went from 1-1/2 hours to a 5 to 6 hour set. Mind you, it took practice with progress and intentions
Finaly found out why i cant play high and why i heart my self. At least its only been about 5 years. I feel like it is going to take quite a bit of time to fix.
The trumpet is such a simple instrument. You only need 3 fingers and a pair of lips (that's what she said as well) I used to regularly get super-C when playing on the red of my lips - but most of of the rest of my range sounded horrible Plus, my stamina issues meant that the mouthpiece veered futher and further towards the left side of my face .. until it was nearly on the corner. A new stern teacher introduced me to Carmine Caruso excersises - he gave me one week off and then I was to play "Lesson 1" with the mouthpiece in the correct position (much as shown in this video) ... My sound improved massively - during one gig, two lovers snogged each other during my solo on "My Foolish Heart" ... that's when I knew it was all worth it! :) I had created a romantic atmosphere with my beautiful trumpet sound.
Thank you so much for this info! Definitely keep coming back to them as I’m trying to get more efficient and consistent with making sure my embouchure is working for me instead of against me!
Makes sense that this is more towards high brass players since for most of the low brass players I know (including me) the mouthpiece naturally sits more on the border Than on the red do to the larger size of the mouthpiece
I wish my teacher sat me down and explained this to me when I was 15, it would have saved my bruised lips many a time. I was in marching band and practiced for hours every day I wish I would have known this.
Came across this today - great info, enjoyed my lesson with Charlie a year or so ago, definitely got me thinking in a new and useful way to how I approach certain parts of my setup
Began playing in grade school 1952. Never got much above high e range. You’re technique info is helpful. That said, these days Trumpet players want double and even tripple c ability. Frankly I don’t get hit it. The squeeky double and tripple c register is more akin to showing off in my view. Musically the upper upper register is pretty lacking. The great lead players of the past really didn’t need to go above double g to make the band sound good. What do you think?
Thank you for this video. Although extremely difficult to do, changing my embouchure makes sense according to your instruction. As a side note, if your friend still makes those Bach 17c mouthpieces, and wouldn't mind making another one, I'd pay top dollar to have one made for me. Anyway, thanks again for a great video.
Great video and subject matter. Personally I think it is okay to play in the red of the bottom lip. Only because the jaw can compensate for any issues. The top lip is the main concern of not playing in the red of the top chop. This will cause a lack of range, endurance and a need to use pressure which is never good. Again these are my personal thoughts. I played in the red of the top lip for years and after reading a number of trumpet method books in the early 80's changed my set up. I then started studying with Roy Stevens where I had major success. I believe I had a french horn embrochure at the time. Unfortunately because of being confused with different methods I changed to a half and half placement and my current set up To conclude the more top lip you can use comfortably playing in the red of the bottom lip is okay.
Thanks. I picked up a trumpet recently for fun, having never had any lessons. No teachers within 1000km of where I live and I know no one playing trumpet! Glad I saw this early on in trumpet journey!
I have been playing for 5 years and I just figured this out 😭
@@ethantran3385 I been playing for 7 years and barely seeing this lol
@@ethantran3385 I had been playing since September so I am here to what not to do on the trumpet 🎺
I "ditto" nathanmort1816. Thanks for the intelligent video! Great teaching
I've spent so long trying to fix my embouchure. I'm a French horn player who has been struggling with my trumpet for my high school jazz band and I saw this video and was immediately able to play a high c. I couldn't ask for a better Christmas gift. Thank you so much and have a blessed day
Rolling in and out is the secret. In for high and out for low. Excellent demo. Don’t set into the red of the lip.
Add one more player "saved," but different. When I was 15, playing well (tho I don't remember if I was doing it right), a guy threw a baseball batt and knocked out my front teeth - 3 on top and 2 on bottom. Broke 'em off at the gum line. (I was laughing at the time of impact, so my lips were basically spared.) I quit playing. Now, 61 years later (yeah, I'm 76), I've bought a cheap cornet because I just want to play again. I found your embouchure teachings two days ago just as I've been able to get the first clean 1st octave G, and now the sun has broken through with angels' voices and I see the way ahead. Thanks! I got your ebook, will get your albums and am working on it! Thanks a million!
These lesson are worth their weight in gold. I played horn very easily from 2nd grade on, but no one ever showed me proper embouchure which led later to not being able to play through the entire range and early fatigue. Bless you Charlie.
Charlie, wish I had you as a teacher when I played in high school. This is exactly what I did and ended up with a split upper lip, pain and a drastic reduction in my playing. Went from 1st chair in junior high/playing 1st trumpet to playing 3rd and a lot of angst. Then went through some painful abdominal surgery as a Junior to boot. Thought of quitting but stuck it out. I’ve got medium sized lips but did it to improve my range, which I never really had to my satisfaction. Had some good teachers, but they never pointed this out.
Now I’m retired and in my 60’s and have picked up the horn again and use your videos as a foundation for practice. I think I’m playing better now than when I was a kid, so thanks for that!
I remember doing this when I first started playing. The music teacher we had in school would not stop complaining that us 1st and 2nd year trumpet players couldn't hit the 2nd octave F in songs, we just had to find a way to do it so he would damn well shut up about it, and I did, by doing exactly what you described. Moved the mouthpiece down, so it went to the red part of my upper lip and bam, instant higher notes. Didn't find out til years later that it had destroyed my ability to play for any extended length of time and getting anything beyond a 3rd octave D felt impossible. Top this off with living in a small town with no brass teacher and with every other brass teacher I came across not wanting to teach me until I had "fixed" this problem. Not one of them even attempted to provide any kind of solution to this, much less how to properly form an embouchure properly in the first place. It got to a point where I just couldn't improve anymore and having to try and figure out everything on my own as an adolescent, I just gave up on playing the instrument. And here I am, liking and hating the instrument at the same time. I sometimes think about what I could have actually done with it if I had been taught properly
come on guy!
You try your best, let's do it again like the old day but with a good and correct lesson!
Yes come on! Im going through an embouchure change right now because of this ,its so so difficult. I'd been playing with half my top lip in for 10 years and it was partly coz of my teeth but not I got them fixed and im working on the new embouchure. I can slowly feel it getting better ,its definitely so so frustrating at times ,but it will be worth it
Whine less play more.
I'm 61 years old and relearning the right way.
Getting better every day.
@@newunderthesun7353 Ok boomer
Wyatt I'm right there with you -- I haven't played in 30 years and I'm constantly taunted by all the fantastic insight I get from these tremendous players all over youtube. IF ONLY.. IF ONLY. I knew some of these things way back then. I had one college teacher that maybe touched on some of the techniques --- having me hold the horn in the palm of my hand without any pressure and learning to get to the high notes - albeit without any power -- but even that --- was not near the advice that I've gotten on line. Unfortunately I live in a quiet development with thin walls and my neighbors would not appreciate this 57 year old learning how to play trumpet again. lol
Just wanted to mention some basic vibration theory: Basically every physical object will vibrate to some degree. Some physical objects have more internal damping and will vibrate less (like Jell-O). But more solid objects have 2 essential properties for vibration: stiffness and mass. In mechanical engineering everything is simplified to make mathematical predictions as easy as possible, the basic vibration model is a point mass on the end of a spring that is grounded on the other end. The natural vibration frequency of the mass bouncing on the spring is sqrt(stiffness/mass). So the frequency increases as stiffness increases and decreases as mass increases. There are 2 opposing forces in the system, one is the spring force pushing or pulling on the mass, the other is the inertia force of the mass as it accelerates (which is happening constantly back and forth). The 2 forces are equal except when forced or there is a lot of energy dissapation in the system (there's always some). So your lips are like this except the stiffness and mass are distributed over the region of your embouchure. There are a lot of ideas proposed for how the lips change frequency and I suggest it is more complex than a guitar string because with a guitar string you change the length that is vibrating, what this does is reduce the mass that's vibrating, and the stiffness is not changed, it's set by the tuning. With the trumpet, to play a note most efficiently, the lip frequency should match the acoustic frequency of the horn as closely as possible (set mostly by the tube length). The amount of tissue that's vibrating determines the mass, and the lip tension determines the stiffness, and the mass and stiffness determine the natural frequency the lips want to vibrate at when forced by air pressure. The trickiest thing, I think about the trumpet, may be the interplay among variables in the embouchure system, mainly between mass and stiffness. When you modulate your embouchure you effect both the mass and stiffness simultaneously. When you tense your lips you also reduce the amount of tissue (mass) that is moving in the vibration. Changing mp placement, as Charlie covers very well here, also changes the stiffness and mass of the embouchure system. There's an infinite number of ways you can place and tense your lips, compared to a guitar, which can be bit more limited due to the mechanics of the frets but of course people have found ways to be very expressive on the guitar by other means. The trumpet IMHO is more expressive, and it more closely emulates the voice due to being similar to the vocal cords.
SINGLE DEGREE OF FREQUENCY !!! The same principles apply in Blast Design (RE: Structures).
Damn i was genuinely wondering about the physics of lip vibration during this video. So glad you could give such a detailed explanation thats awesome. One thing im comfused about tho, you said when you tense the lips the stiffness is increaed but the mass of tissue vibrating is decreased. If the lips are tensed, wouldnt there be the same volume of lip vibration since mouthpiece has a fixed cross sectional area, whilst the density of the tensed lips is higher than loose lips, thus increasing the vibrational mass??
@@lp9931 I dont know about lip phyics specificslly but do know about theories of vibration, I think what's likely true is that the stiffness and mass vary constantly and vary between players. When you tense your lips the amount of vibrating tissue varies along with the stiffness. If you use a smile embouchure for instance maybe there is less surrounding tissue vibrating when tensing.
I mean, that and the AIR… You can keep the embouchure constant and still move through several partials just by changing the air. It’s a very complex system to model. Woodwinds, for example, manage without changing the modulus/stiffness if the reed. Granted, they have register keys (flute excluded) to encourage higher harmonics.
That was it. I marked the time with my original "bingo" 2 weeks ago.
The progress, in 2 weeks, is that I moved from a very painful high A and an endurance of 60 minutes, to double high D and collapsing after 2 hours. With an Artisan 3C.
Well my teacher thought I wasn't using enough air, so I always had to blow the Greek Gods of Wind through that piece of metal.
I'm still adjusting and if I don't pay close attention I play a B flat instead of an F. A 2 mm change opened up the high register for me. The notes were always there, I just couldn't get to them.
Now I need to build the muscles and do some target practice. In 6 months I'll be fine.
Thank you Mr.Porter. You helped making a fat noob trumpet player happy.
shaking my head in disbelief at the way you have added so much value to my playing, thank you
Charlie, I’ve been playing the trumpet for over 65 years, I’m 75 old. I have recovered from a stroke. I didn’t play for some 3 yrs.and looking around for a method to get my chops back in shape. I really like your method and am following it an it seems to be working, thanks for your teaching method, it seems logical and not a gimmick Marc Brandl
Great tutorial! This is such an important factor for success and enjoyment in playing trumpet! I too learned playing in the "red" and my private teachers never addressed any of this with me until I went college. I studied with Roger Murtha at the Hartt School of Music and clocked it. He gave me a choice to switch my major from African -American Music Jazz Trumpet to Music Education to fix the problem or give me a customized set of drills from the Schlossberg, Arban and Clarke books. Well, I chose the later because I loved being around all the jazz legends like Jackie McLean and all the master classes he had with the heroes of jazz. After graduating, Roger recommended I study with Valerie Ponomarev and make transition from in the 'red' to 1/4 up and 1/4 down. I took a little over a year but I'm grateful I did it, and twenty five years later I still keep in touch with Roger and Valerie for I owe them so much! I'm sorry to be long winded Charlie, but your video tutorial reached home to me and thank heaven your putting this out there. As a music educator my self, I make it my business to address mouthpiece placement with all my students and it's a joy to watch them grow! Thank you so much for this video, you're a blessing! Be safe and well, Rob Ravosa
Thanks Charlie, for a very interesting and thought provoking presentation. I’m in my sixties and have been playing since elementary school but remain just average, even on my best days. I’ve not played much during the pandemic, the ensemble that I play with has been inactive but I do need to get back in the practice room, and this certainly give me something to think about.
I had no idea this was even a thing - I'm trying it now and the default note that comes out when I just put air through the trumpet went from a middle G to a high G. I recently got moved up to first in a jazz band I'm and I've been really struggling with the high notes, so thank you so much for this.
I love the fact that you have such a good understanding of this topic and have probably the greatest reasoning and opinion of this super controversial and highly sought after topic for understanding. With this entire video you pretty much covered all the variables of this except for a few very obscure things that I have "discovered" and researched. I play inside the red of my bottom lip and have played like this for 11 years and I use the MF protocol for my preferred embouchure method which is loosening my entire aperture and embouchure.
1. This is mainly a topic for the embouchure type of tightening and pressure changing for different notes: This is the most common and most widely used in almost all the world and there is more information about this than a couple of others out there.
2. The other embouchure types such as loosening your entire embouchure from the corners to your aperture to smiling and widening your embouchure and aperture for different notes and tone qualities aren't the most suited for this topic. Tightening and using the pressure changing method in these types of embouchures are different for them in a lot of different ways.
3. The anatomy of everyone is different may cause more harm than good if this information is used too literally. Most people don't find things easier if change is suggested to a person if they already have an existing use of their embouchure type.
4. Use of information from a teacher about a complete different use of something about your anatomy should be used cautiously and under the supervision of an educator that has extreme experience with what is your preferred method or use of different methods combined for there own use.
This information that I have provided is mainly an educated opinion with extensive research over a few years with teachers and students from the state of california and Arizona. Please comment on this about different information and experiences that you have had about anything, I'd love to hear it and help me educate myself and others about it.
I love criticism and others who have a lot of information about this highly controversial topic
Great content! Played for years with range issues from playing too much on the red. Took lessons for years and through college, and no one said a word about it. . no one knew how to help. I went through this process (changing embouchure to get OFF the red) in my 30's and my trumpet playing is infinitely better and I really don't have any range limitations. Thank you for providing this instruction and preaching the word!
Thanks a lot for your video ! I have big lips as well, and I always had troubles playing high and maintaining endurance. I realize now that I moved my embouchure to the red when I needed high notes.
Anyway, I had a gig last night, I played following your advice, and it worked perfectly! I'm so glad after all those years of hassle
72 yrs old and only 5 yrs into this. I've learned more here about how to from the embouchure than all the lessons --- and --- it's been a tremendous help and assistance. To reiterate the comment below: Thankyou thankyou thankyou!!!!
Lawrence, I'm 63 and have just started playing the cornet again this year, haven't played since I was in my early twenties. I'm learning more from his videos than I ever knew before. I'm still struggling to play, but I'm on the right path and having fun thanks to Charlie Porter's videos. Wishing you the best.
@@rickeyhargrove7556 Appreciating your comments. It's old guys having fun---LEARNING
Lawrence & Ricky, I’m 62 and just started back 2 weeks ago. Previously I played for 8 yrs ending when I graduated high school. I too have learned more about the basics from Charlies’ videos than I ever did before or from my current teacher.
My teacher is the best. Unfortunately, I believe, by reading the comments teachers fail to grasp the situation because it's a mere 2 millimeter move on the upper lip (for me) that they just can't see. BTW, I'm 52 and I started playing 4 years ago after a hiatus of 35 years :)
This tip has made a huge improvement in my endurance and high range. I’m a intermediate beginner, and the adjustment time was short (30 mins of long notes and BANG). Much gratitude to Mr Porter for the deep teach.
I'm glad I found your channel! I'm in the American Legion Honor Guard and I'm trying to learn taos on the bugle. I have always been a string instrument musician, and this has been frustrating, but there is nobody in this area who can play bugle.
My man you have just saved my trumpet career
Damn it...I needed this lesson/revelation about 40 years ago. I played trumpet and marched in drum and bugle corps (SUTA!) and always struggled with endurance and consistent quality in the upper register. Reworking my embouchure with this in mind would have made all the difference, I believe. In any case I'm glad I stumbled onto this if for no other reason than now I know about Charlie Porter and his music.
I don't know how often you check these comments Charlie, but if you do I can't say enough about how helpful this video, as well the others you've produced have helped me through my embouchure change. Your methodology and presentations are logical and precise. Thank you, thank you, thank you!
This is the video what I have been looking for my entire career as a trumpet player, thank you so much man!
Due to braces (and wax that I put over braces so they wouldn't cut into my lip) I too started on the red portion of the upper lip. Low notes were good, but anything above a G (top of the staff) was questionable... plus poor endurance.
I tried once my own to raise the positioning, but it felt SO unnatural and I had difficulty producing decent sound / tone.
Then, several years later, I committed myself to make the change no matter what. Was the BEST thing I could have done. Range... endurance... EVERYTHING improved. I even got a Monette mouthpiece and did even better. Until.....
I discovered a Giddings mouthpiece (stainless steel). Experienced even MORE improvement... Endurance... Range... Less pressure... Comfort, etc. And over time the improvement continues.
I can now practice for 1.5 hours like it used to be when I practiced for 1 hour.
Back in the day, Vincent Bach revolutionized the mouthpiece. It is why the Bach became the standard, "go to" mouthpiece for about 80 years. And it is still very playable.
Started playing the trumpet 3 months ago, this tips are gold...
CONGRATS ON THE GRAMMY! I’ve been following you since middle school and now I’m in college. So cool!
What Was it for ? 😱
I got a cornet today to learn on Charlie and so glad I found your video before I begin to learn all the wrong ways of playing ! I'm subbed on you so hoping I can pick up some good skills. Thanks for sharing.
this is what I needed all these years ago, man i'm grateful you're making these videos
I have big lips like you. I wish I'd known this years ago! I've always struggled with the big RING on the top lip. Probably from too much pressure. Gonna watch your embouchure video now and see how I've been probably doing it wrong for 24 years. My trumpet teacher in college used to try so hard to get me to avoid so much pressure.
Kia ora @Charlie Porter, this is an awesome video - I only wish you had made it 10 years ago! I used to play trumpet on the red throughout highschool with so much frustration, that I thought I should just give up and play euphonium. Once I started undergrad I had it changed and it was the best decision for my playing. That's not to say it was easy though - in fact it was one of the most agonizing things I had to go through! I was supposed to be an undergrad trumpet student, yet it felt like I had to start over with the range of a beginner. One of the things that I had to watch out for was other bad habits that I developed while I was playing in the red. This included not knowing how to use the tongue to change the pitch among many other things. Anyways, I digress. I'm digging these new videos and I'm so gutted I missed out on seeing you here in New Zealand!
you came a hell of a long way, and like Charlie said in the video, aren't you glad you did!
I'm a cellist, professional 60 years, but I enjoyed your presentation! Now and then I play F Horn. So it's just good to know these things.
Thanks for the explanation. It explains why my trumpet teacher did this to me 35 years ago...I found I have to go into the red to get lower notes as when I went out of the red, I was stuck with a range in the stratosphere with little effort and having trouble getting to the low notes. I'm now having to re-teach myself this after a 20 year holiday from playing trumpet.
Thank you so much Charlis Porter. I am a beginner and as a vocalist and piano player I overstand the importance of learning a good habit as apposed to a bad habit in the beginning approach to any form of music or life. I will continue to follow your teaching method and I pray that you have a beginners class on line or CD. You truly are a fantastic teacher!!! Peace and Love!!!
My first trumpet (and first wind instrument) arrives tomorrow. I look forward to using your lessons
Thank you Charlie for sharing these videos I have learnt a lot from your videos I watch many of them you have such a good sound I am new to playing just started learning to play I play cornet and trumpet and is all self taught still have a long way to go will keep watching your videos to learn more . Thank you.
Thank you. I just recently decided to see if my lips could play some 40's Swing. Carpal tunnel surgery killed my hands, so I can no longer play my guitars. I've watched every RUclips video on the subject of Trombone & Bugle that have come my way. This one, of yours, popped-up and I realized that it is exactly the kind of information that I need! Thank you for demonstrating LIP PLACEMENT for us. I had no idea, except I realized y'all don't play the thing like a Gazoo! I can make my lips and throat SOUND like a trumpet and a Trombone just by themselves. (The INKSPOTS could do that, too). Just the little bit of trying to make notes and figure out how to BUZZ, shows me how much work goes into training your lips JUST TO BUZZ ! much less training them to make notes that don't sound like Long-tailed cats crying in a room full of rocking chairs! If I live another few months, I'll have lived seven decades. That doesn't sound as bad as stated in years!
THANKS AGAIN !!!
Thank you for this valuable content. I am a beginning Trombone player (soon to be Trumpet as well if the cards land right) and trying to set myself up for a strong start. No money for lessons yet, so videos like this are priceless!
Man I really needed to see this video, been struggling with endurance issues lately and I’ve been playing in the red without knowing anything about how bad that was for you. Thanks for the help man 👑🎶🎺
I haven't picked up a horn in 40 years. I needed this lesson to find my clear sound again. Thank you!
Lucky me discovering your channel! Found out I did it wrong for ages! I am 25 now and taking trumpet back after quiting due to braces. Lifting up my embouchure helped out straight away! Thanks so much sir! This is incredibly helpfull ! Merci
Oh my god, all these years... This is an amazing lesson. Thank you very much. I have instantly improved by a lot just from this video.
best 17 minutes ever to help my playing.
I have played trumpet for 40 years and never been taught embouchure properly despite doing my RSM grades! Thankyou so so much for your video help. First time I have seen your classes today. Now you will help me to become a much better player. Thankyou so much. Fantastic teacher.
Nice Charlie, I read your bio on Wikipedia. I studied at The Mannes School of Music from 1967 thru to 1970. My trumpet teacher who was a trombone player decided I needed to change my embouchure to get "a symphonic sound", even though I had great chops. His advice wrecked my embouchure, not that I even knew what an embouchure was at the time! In my second year, I discovered that a few of the guys were taking lessons outside of school with Roy Stevens (Costello Method), and I studied with him trying to recover my range and flexibility. Unfortunately, it became too frustrating and I gave up. I'm trying to make a bit of a comeback now playing for my own pleasure. Thank you for posting on RUclips... you're a good man "Charlie Brown".
Hey Charlie, thanks so much for making this video. I've since found my own way to this realisation and had probably been partially playing on the red for my whole career. I've recently gone the Maggio route which naturally steered me into a non-red embouchure. Ironically i've always had decent range and edurance, I feel like I've turned a corner. Looking forwrad to getting back to gigging post covid but man, some of the muscles are going to be playing catch up!
Hi Charlie. I listened to your video on the perils of red lip playing and agree entirely. For the first five years of my 55 years of trumpet playing I was doing just that with the rim on my upper lip and my head tipped back. What I found was inconsistency and limitation of range and endurance. I finally became so frustrated that I decided to change my embouchre or give up the instrument entirely!
So I started rolling my lips in, bringing my head position into neutral, and imagining blowing straight through the horn (although I have a downstream air flow). After 6-8 months of combating the foreign feel of this new setting, I settled in and have not looked back enjoying improved range and endurance. During that first year I did have one setback splitting the right side of my upper lip during a period of heavy range and fortissimo playing demands. That part of my lip will peel to this day if I overplay with too much pressure (my quality control mechanism, Ha!).
One thing I have become conscious of over the years is over pulling at the corners in the upper register which can lead to rapid lip fatigue. This has ameliorated over the past10 months sine I have been grinding my way through the Claude Gordon method with its emphasis on air stream control and modulation. I have been able to relax the corners a bit and play with a bit fuller lip resulting in a warmer more relaxed sound with improved endurance and without any loss of range.
One thing I have noticed recently is that occasionally I will get a raspiness in my tone which I formerly never had. Any thoughts there?
Means you suck 🤣🤣🤣🤣
As a man who also has very "kissable lips" I've been told simple to make the letter "M" and let the air create the embouchure with the sort of "poo" motion and it's gotten me a long way so far... I'll have to give your "four step method" a try! I initially came here because I have a few colleagues who play "in the red" and I've always been told to avoid but was never told why... Maybe one day if you come on back to the Palm Beach area we can meet for a lesson and a coffee... Thanks again for all the great content!
Watched this as a trombonist and got my mouthpiece out and realised a small portion of the red in my bottom lip was inside the rim, now I'm tucking it in and playing feels better and tone is reliable, thanks! I think I normally vary slightly how I put the mouthpiece to my chops, sometimes the red is all in and sometimes not, but I hadn't thought about this as a thing to worry about!
TKs Charlie, yore a cool cat - I played in HS (HS of Perfornig Arts, NYC) in the 70s. Walked away from the horn and focsed on drama. Some 45 years later I picked up a horn, have no range, and appranetly I'm doign somehting wrong. This embrouchure insight is powerful. tks a ton.
Charlie, thanks. I tried your steps without a mouth piece, and I do feel more confident with it.
Your explanation really helps.
You really inspired me. So appreciate what you have done. I start to play my trumpet again. These videos are priceless . Thanks for your sharing
as a former tmea all state trombone player and now principal of a local symphony i was playing in the red until about last year. Was having endurance issues especially playing 1st bone through long symphonies and i used to shift into the red to crank out so high notes above concert g and a flat. I have since changed more to a trumpet style embouchure and man my sound has gone to levels i never thought possible. The change was very frustrating basically learning how to vibrate all over again but well worth it.
Watching this 5 years since i've touched a horn since high school. I remember playing in the red after I got braces and it improved my tone and range, but after an hour my lips were shot. I was 3rd chair and played in the jazz band.
Thank you ... I've been working the mouth pieces of trumpet, tuba, and baritone with tremendous success when I go back to the instrument. I had no idea how to work the lips so they formed the skin of a drum.
Thanks for the great content. Went and watched the 4 step setup video. You've improved your audio quality on your videos a lot!
Thank you for your teaching, it makes it easier for me as a beginner
THANK YOU SO MUCH!!! I was stuck like 3 months on low notes because I was playing in the red of the lips
Splendidly presented. Your enthusiasm and understanding is refreshing. Excellent.
Thanks, Charlie this video was very helpful. I did not have a teacher starting out so i formed the habit of playing in the red. i now have to go back in time and learn how to place the mouthpiece. properly
Great, great, GREAT video. I still trying to play the right way, it's not easy.
Every person who ever wants to play a trumpet will benefit from your impassioned and valuable advice 👌
Keep at it.
Obu UDEOZO
Great video! Wish someone taught me this back in 1980.
Wow. Never put together I might be playing in the red because I was adjusting due to my lips. Thank you for this!
Thanks man! happy I found you. 1 year of learning on my own and some red lips.
Great vid Charlie. I too played in the red previously. One time I played some short pieces in a Phil Smith masterclass and he suggested move the mouthpiece u p! I waited 5 yrs to do it but once I did it made a huge difference. I really had hit a wall with my playing and could no longer play a long gig.... Took me another 2 yrs to feel natural that way but well worth it....should've done as a teenager.
Hi Charlie, great lessons. Thank you very much!
Always thought Brownie's MP must have been huge with his tone....thanks Charlie. Good stuff.
I’m so glad I found this vid. I thought that playing in the red meant the inside of your mouth. It makes so much sense. My lips were always beat up when I played because I was out too much pressure the only red of my lips. To try and combat that I puffed my cheeks so my lips wouldn’t hurt. Then my corners got really fatigued which is what I’m struggling with now and they get really sore. My endurance is so bad. I’m glad I can fix this while I’m still a freshman.
Great demonstration and very helpful. Thank you!
I'm a woodwind player but I find your videos very informative. Thanks 👍
thanks to you, i've got it! lip buzzing is the key
Such good content. Wish I had heard this message when I was 15, well before the days of RUclips! Playing in the top lip destroyed my trumpet playing and I’m now focused on trombone. Interestingly I have Invisalign which are removable braces and when do play the trumpet my range is way better with the braces in, no idea why.
Hello, Charlie! I'm your subscriber from Ukraine and I watched the most of your videos and I delighted with them! I've playing the trumpet for 18 years and in my childhood I played at my top lip and the bottom lip was under the top, but I played well. Then, I had the problems in college, because my lips had grown up, and I changed my set up, unfortunately unsuccessfully. Now, I'm trying your four-step setting up, but my lips are very uncontrollable and after practice I usually have a scar from the teeth on back of the top lip. Sorry for my English and I would be glad for any tips or advices from you, thank you!!!
When started my upper lip would slid up. The upper red would be on my mouthpiece rim. Endurance went out the door. Octaves were non-existence. It wasn’t until I read an article about the Rubber-ban muscle, with an illustration, around the lips. The article went on to say the inner rim diameter of the mouthpiece must be slightly over the outer edge of the lips. It also said not to have too much of the outer upper embouchure in the mouthpiece. When I began practicing this new mouthpiece positioning, my octaves went from a struggle high C to C4. My endurance went from 1-1/2 hours to a 5 to 6 hour set. Mind you, it took practice with progress and intentions
What a legend bro, that's perseverance, God bless
Im gonna link this video to my former trumpet teacher.
This video just confirmed that there is nothing wrong with my lip placement
Finaly found out why i cant play high and why i heart my self. At least its only been about 5 years. I feel like it is going to take quite a bit of time to fix.
Thank-You for the vivid explanation. Long time coming..but worth the wait.
Thank you for this tip you just told me the answer to my number one problem atm
This is simply amazing... thank you so much for sharing your knowledge! Please keep producing these informative videos!
Thank you very much for an invaluable lesson which is so essential to know for beginners like my good self.
Good lessons. I listen this morning. Great 👍
Bravo Charlie. A very well presented video and I'm sure it will help many trumpet players.
The trumpet is such a simple instrument. You only need 3 fingers and a pair of lips (that's what she said as well)
I used to regularly get super-C when playing on the red of my lips - but most of of the rest of my range sounded horrible
Plus, my stamina issues meant that the mouthpiece veered futher and further towards the left side of my face .. until it was nearly on the corner.
A new stern teacher introduced me to Carmine Caruso excersises - he gave me one week off and then I was to play "Lesson 1" with the mouthpiece in the correct position (much as shown in this video) ...
My sound improved massively - during one gig, two lovers snogged each other during my solo on "My Foolish Heart" ... that's when I knew it was all worth it! :)
I had created a romantic atmosphere with my beautiful trumpet sound.
Thank you so much for this info! Definitely keep coming back to them as I’m trying to get more efficient and consistent with making sure my embouchure is working for me instead of against me!
I seen a few pics of Roy Hargrove play in the “red”
I’ve def played that way even til now
Yeah just looked at a picture of him. He definitely does.
Makes sense that this is more towards high brass players since for most of the low brass players I know (including me) the mouthpiece naturally sits more on the border Than on the red do to the larger size of the mouthpiece
Thanks, Charlie!
So great for beginner, thank you
This is immensely helpful !! Thank you, Charlie !!
Hi Charlie,
Great tips, myself never thought of red area no contact with mouthpiece, will check myself today, come back and tell you!
Johnny D Bergh
I like the way you talk. I play very little trumpet and don't really care, you just have a nice voice
I wish my teacher sat me down and explained this to me when I was 15, it would have saved my bruised lips many a time. I was in marching band and practiced for hours every day I wish I would have known this.
Another light switch moment for me! Thank you.
Charlie, thank you so much for sharing such great tips!
Thank you Charles. Great information.
Came across this today - great info, enjoyed my lesson with Charlie a year or so ago, definitely got me thinking in a new and useful way to how I approach certain parts of my setup
Began playing in grade school 1952. Never got much above high e range. You’re technique info is helpful. That said, these days Trumpet players want double and even tripple c ability. Frankly I don’t get hit it. The squeeky double and tripple c register is more akin to showing off in my view. Musically the upper upper register is pretty lacking. The great lead players of the past really didn’t need to go above double g to make the band sound good. What do you think?
Thank you for this video. Although extremely difficult to do, changing my embouchure makes sense according to your instruction. As a side note, if your friend still makes those Bach 17c mouthpieces, and wouldn't mind making another one, I'd pay top dollar to have one made for me. Anyway, thanks again for a great video.
Great video and subject matter. Personally I think it is okay to play in the red of the bottom lip. Only because the jaw can compensate for any issues. The top lip is the main concern of not playing in the red of the top chop. This will cause a lack of range, endurance and a need to use pressure which is never good. Again these are my personal thoughts. I played in the red of the top lip for years and after reading a number of trumpet method books in the early 80's changed my set up. I then started studying with Roy Stevens where I had major success. I believe I had a french horn embrochure at the time. Unfortunately because of being confused with different methods I changed to a half and half placement and my current set up
To conclude the more top lip you can use comfortably playing in the red of the bottom lip is okay.