You are the first person that I have come across that has made the most sense with clearer instructions of how to produce noise out of the trumpet instead of farting noises.
I started learning trumpet 40 years ago, just recently picked it up again, I'm in awe of the way we would just dump spit anywhere, share trumpets, winding it up back there, now my music mechanic won't even touch my trumpet for 72 hours.
After a year of lessons...giving up...then 5 years of wanting to start again...then I pick the thing up again...then found this video...and MAN this is instruction and info I wish I'd had years ago! Thank you, sir!
I am surprised at any negative comments. A student needs to understand the concept of what the mouthpiece does and how important it is to master the lip placement. This class is aimed at a specific audience and personally I think it’s well presented.
This lesson is excellent. I'm a first year band/music teacher and French hornist just finding your videos, and this has given me a lot of insight about what I am doing and what I need to add and/or change about my current approach! I really appreciate how you are able to be technical yet simple with young kids when it comes to sound concept. That helps me so much. Thank you for sharing this!
Christopher, I'm a NEWBIE at computers. Retired from the military (52 years old) and am using the GI Bill to turn the Associates that I got at Colby Community College (Colby, Kansas) 25 years ago into a Masters so that I can become a history teacher at a small community college "somewhere." I bought a trumpet so that I can learn how to play taps. The way that it is commonly done with the fake trumpets because of the shortage of trumpet/bugle players just isn't the same. I've been trying to teach myself how to play. I had a few starter lessons from a high-school teacher, but that's it. I just found your lessons today & watched the first one. I am EXTREMELY happy that I did. Your lesson about how to strengthen the mouth muscles (which I hope can still be done at 52 years) and practicing with the mouthpiece/straw are greatly appreciated. I wrote down your name so that I can find my way back to your lessons and learn more. I'm pretty sure that you understand. Picture yourself at a funeral at the time of "taps." In my own eyes it is a special, emotional moment. I want to get good enough that I add to that moment, rather than take away from it. William Dill wedill@mail.fhsu.edu 785-567-3162
William, I've been thinking about the same thing. While on active duty I participated in many funeral details. The boom box behind a tomb stone just doesn't get it done. Are you doing trumpet or bugle???
Hi, yes you can train yourself to do this, you have lips and lungs like everyone else. I am 59 yrs old and purchased a b Trumpet for Valentines Day 2020 - I can play taps now. My other 2 uncles still living (77 yrs and 82 yrs) were in the Navy (my other uncle was but he died in 2019 at age 93). These uncles are my Mom's brothers! I want to play at their funerals to honor their Naval Service! I am using a mouthpiece 7C I heard that for beginners, since we have weak lip/mouth muscles a 5C make it easier (have not tried this yet). However, the high register notes are soooo hard for me. I have a high C, D, E, but they are NOT consistent. So I re-arranged my Taps music to C-F-A-C and I like it better than D-G-B-D. Day by day, just like high school and college kids learn, we adults can learn too!! (I did study piano while I was in Jr. High, so I can read music, which helps-a little). I can also play Happy Birthday! You can find music on www.Notes8.com some free, or $20/annual membership to print all you want. Check out his GoPro Cam on a Trumpet-Marching Band-Go Nebraska! I get really out of breath too on the high notes as they take so much more air, and my muscles hurt too. ruclips.net/video/GmN2Swd9-Tk/видео.html
The bit about the teeth, illustrated with the straw, is gold. I’ve heard students told to “drop their jaw” before but never realized that getting the teeth apart was at least part of the reason for it.
I like your style of teaching the hardcore basics good solid ground work on the important foundations. Just like guitar, every body want to sound like this or that. When they need to change a style they had no foundation to refer to. txs
FINALLY...someone tells me how to make my oogly expression look ghoulish. All kidding aside, thank you for explaining exactly HOW to form my lips to play. I started on a Harbor Freight Bugle, bought a student trumpet at a pawn shop, hung up my bugle, my grandson brought his Trombone up here, so I'm squeezing a few notes out of Trumpet and Trombone. I love 40's swing music. Carpal tunnel surgery screwed up my guitar playing, so I figured, try playing a horn. I'll be 70 in another month.
Best beginner vid I have seen so far. Could not buzz at first, but on a 1hr ride to town magic happened. Can buzz to the radio now. Gotta get a mouthpiece next after this weird facial feeling subsides. Thx!!
I have watched so many videos in the past few days on how to learn how to buzz and these videos were all made by professional trumpet players and within 5 minutes of YOUR video, I finally understood how the lips and teeth should be. Amazing how much difference there is in the instructor. You're amazing, bud! I don't have my trumpet yet, it's being shipped, but with your small video I can now make higher pitched buzzes with my lips where I was only able to make lower ones before. BTW, I did play French Horn as a kid. And I remember it was EASIER to buzz in those mouthpieces than a trumpet mouthpiece. Maybe because the French Horn is a lower pitched instrument and you can even make some bass sounds from it. So the higher pitched trumpet is more of a challenge.
Thanks a lot Walter for these helpful videos, going to grab my old Besson and Cuesnon flugelhorns. I have 1.5 to 3 CFL mouthpieces, what size is best ? Regards Marc
Such a great beginner lesson - I am 59 year old driving instructor, and want to learn this instrument. Just got a new Mendini yesterday. The 'straw' and 'solo mouthpiece' steps are so helpful! Ready to 'workout'! Thanks Mr. Music Man! I love Music teachers that help all these young students become awesome marching band members!!
Thank you for such a great teaching video. I played the violin until my Freshman year of HS was very good at it but started to lose interest when I saw my friends who were band members having a lot more fun than I was with marching at football games and stage band opportunities a string player didn’t have 50 years ago so the summer after my Freshman year I talked the band teacher into letting me borrow a tenor saxophone over the summer with the agreement I could have a spot in the HS bank if I could play that saxophone to her satisfaction so when school started I auditioned for my spot in the band and was accepted, loved playing the saxophone but continued playing the violin for the first two years of college because I was offered a tuition scholarship and money was tight but soon the music department at college learned of my music abilities and that I also could play the clarinet along with the saxophone so I got another scholarship offer to play the clarinet which was not my favorite but my saxophone abilities earned me a spot on the college jazz band which I played with until graduation. I enjoyed my music playing years very much but after college marriage and family and new career got in the way of my music and I stopped playing sad to say but I always thought I would pick it up again when I was older. Unfortunately health issues got in the way and at age 48 I had a massive stroke and lost the use of my left side but the music urge was still there so I decided I would try once again to teach myself to play another instrument so I chose the trumpet since it could be played with using only one hand and I still had one hand that worked as it should. So bought a student horn and went to work only to learn it wasn’t as easy for me as it was 50 years ago but being retired now I have time to work at it. I’m making progress but needed to watch and read anything I could find about learning to play the trumpet so finding videos like yours were a welcome find for me. I recently lost my father and the bugler at his military funeral service was a recording which I thought disrespectful so now I’m trying to get good enough to volunteer at the local national cemetery to play taps the way it should be. I have a ways to go but I intend to do it to honor my father and his service
I recently started playing, as a matter of fact I've been visiting trumpet lessons for just over 2 months now. Could give me an advice on using self-tearchers, for example i have downloaded Tonestro, which is supposed to help me learn on my own. Is it adviceable for a newb like me to use such a software for whenever I am unable to visit a teacher?
I'm glad I found your video!! I'm in the American Legion honor guard. I'll be 60 in a few weeks, and I never thought about learning the bugle, but I'm bound and determined to learn😁. I have been using the bugle with the recording in it, and I'm not satisfied doing that. A bugle player in another post has let me borrow his bugle to practice with
Hello, what exercises do you recommend to achieve the high-pitched notes of the trumpet, I have done everything and they don't come out ... that's why I can't basically play anything.
How is it going so far? It's harder to make a clean note than I imagined. And I never knew you could play a song without hitting any buttons, just from blowing different sounds from your mouth. That was surprising.
Hi! I'm looking into starting to play the trumpet and I've never used an air instrument before. It's full on a first time for me and I'm a bit skittish about investing in something I don't know if I'm going to properly like, as at the moment, all I know is I like the concept of it: would you say it'd be a bad idea to buy the mouthpiece alone, to try if I can do it? If it sticks and I get this exercise right, maybe then I can rent the instrument locally.
Great video! I’m sure this helps a lot of your students. What to do if my attempt at buzzing just causes the lips to part and air to whisper through without a buzz at all?
I was a tuba player back in school, haven’t played since… I always wanted to play trumpet, picked one up recently and I’m having trouble getting the buzz through the small mouth piece
one thing i think is also important that he didnt touch on, have firm and supporting corners on your lips. The inside/center of your lips should be loose and relaxed to buzz
first thank you for your much appreciated im not getting the buzzing im more like hyperventilating do you use your voice to make the noise or just wind or blowing air
Christopher Walter Great video! Wow I did not know that the mouthpiece was the instrument and the horn the modifier. Thanks for the info!! And thanks even more for slowly putting them together to hear the difference! I 'm new and I have seen both people play with "a kind of no lip" and "farting noises" and get good sound out of them. Who's right? Both?
dang! this is tough! no vibration. is there moisture around the lips? when i do make a sound- it sounds like prrfft. tongue btwn lips making a frt sound 😮 it's easier for me to make a kazoo sound with my vocal chords and pursed lips. if that is how to do it- now i'm in business!
PespiCorp not to disrespect Chris, but I disagree with basically everything in this video. In my experience, clamping, mouthpiece buzzing, blowing hard, and playing long tones as much as you can all work together to trash your facial muscles and destroy your embouchure's sensitivity. The tissue of the lips is very delicate and I've gotten better results treating playing as a skill, like whistling , rather than a feat of strength. Just don't exhaust your muscles or press the mouthpiece into the lips and you'll get better as long as you practice experimentally.
Matthew Rodriguez i get what you mean but i think chris is just trying to really simplify it for younger kids, but yeah once people get older theyll adapt to what you are saying
When you do your lip clamps you said it takes you about 12 minutes to fatigue, that's a loooong time! Are you clamping full strength, continually, that entire time?
It is funny to learn 🎺 trumpet 🎺 during lock - downs ❗🤣 ❗ My neighbours are ...........................................................................................................................
If your tone is pinched or nasally there are a couple things to think about: First, make sure you teeth are apart about the width of a pencil or straw. Having your teeth too close together inhibits the air flow. Second, your throat is closed and tense. Lay on the floor, but your hands behind your head and practice breathing long deep breaths. Look into the breathing gym exercises buy stay away from ones that make you practice tension. I am not a fan of those. Another great way to open the throat up is to sing nice low, mellow tones. Think about the FEELING of the throat being open and try to emulate that on your trumpet. Lastly, and again this is air related - your blowing from your throat or head instead of your diaphragm. Again, breathing exercises to get the feeling of deep full breaths. Start on your mouthpiece for a while and get your mouthpiece buzz to sound full and resonate. Then move to the horn.
You are the first person that I have come across that has made the most sense with clearer instructions of how to produce noise out of the trumpet instead of farting noises.
exactly! he gave actually physical instructions. everyone else is so vague
I think its cause hes a teacher for a school
I started learning trumpet 40 years ago, just recently picked it up again, I'm in awe of the way we would just dump spit anywhere, share trumpets, winding it up back there, now my music mechanic won't even touch my trumpet for 72 hours.
954814781+1
@@scoremxcom u old
Anyone learning trumpet or any brass instrument in quarantine
me
Just got one.
Mine just came in the mail today! I’m excited
I am! :)
For band
After a year of lessons...giving up...then 5 years of wanting to start again...then I pick the thing up again...then found this video...and MAN this is instruction and info I wish I'd had years ago! Thank you, sir!
Ut
I am surprised at any negative comments. A student needs to understand the concept of what the mouthpiece does and how important it is to master the lip placement. This class is aimed at a specific audience and personally I think it’s well presented.
This lesson is excellent. I'm a first year band/music teacher and French hornist just finding your videos, and this has given me a lot of insight about what I am doing and what I need to add and/or change about my current approach! I really appreciate how you are able to be technical yet simple with young kids when it comes to sound concept. That helps me so much. Thank you for sharing this!
Christopher,
I'm a NEWBIE at computers. Retired from the military (52 years old) and am using the GI Bill to turn the Associates that I got at Colby Community College (Colby, Kansas) 25 years ago into a Masters so that I can become a history teacher at a small community college "somewhere."
I bought a trumpet so that I can learn how to play taps. The way that it is commonly done with the fake trumpets because of the shortage of trumpet/bugle players just isn't the same.
I've been trying to teach myself how to play. I had a few starter lessons from a high-school teacher, but that's it.
I just found your lessons today & watched the first one. I am EXTREMELY happy that I did. Your lesson about how to strengthen the mouth muscles (which I hope can still be done at 52 years) and practicing with the mouthpiece/straw are greatly appreciated. I wrote down your name so that I can find my way back to your lessons and learn more.
I'm pretty sure that you understand. Picture yourself at a funeral at the time of "taps." In my own eyes it is a special, emotional moment. I want to get good enough that I add to that moment, rather than take away from it.
William Dill
wedill@mail.fhsu.edu
785-567-3162
William, I've been thinking about the same thing. While on active duty I participated in many funeral details. The boom box behind a tomb stone just doesn't get it done. Are you doing trumpet or bugle???
I just came across your post. I grew up in Leoti. Are you still at Hays?
Hi, yes you can train yourself to do this, you have lips and lungs like everyone else. I am 59 yrs old and purchased a b Trumpet for Valentines Day 2020 - I can play taps now. My other 2 uncles still living (77 yrs and 82 yrs) were in the Navy (my other uncle was but he died in 2019 at age 93). These uncles are my Mom's brothers! I want to play at their funerals to honor their Naval Service! I am using a mouthpiece 7C I heard that for beginners, since we have weak lip/mouth muscles a 5C make it easier (have not tried this yet). However, the high register notes are soooo hard for me. I have a high C, D, E, but they are NOT consistent. So I re-arranged my Taps music to C-F-A-C and I like it better than D-G-B-D. Day by day, just like high school and college kids learn, we adults can learn too!! (I did study piano while I was in Jr. High, so I can read music, which helps-a little). I can also play Happy Birthday! You can find music on www.Notes8.com some free, or $20/annual membership to print all you want. Check out his GoPro Cam on a Trumpet-Marching Band-Go Nebraska! I get really out of breath too on the high notes as they take so much more air, and my muscles hurt too. ruclips.net/video/GmN2Swd9-Tk/видео.html
Thank you very much. I really appreciate your thoughtfulness.
You are an amazing teacher. Fabulous lesson. I'm sure your students are motivated! They are lucky.
Yeah, he explains things other videos tap dance around.
The bit about the teeth, illustrated with the straw, is gold. I’ve heard students told to “drop their jaw” before but never realized that getting the teeth apart was at least part of the reason for it.
I agree fantastic lesson, I'm excited to practise, thank you so much!!
i am a guitar player and i know nothing about trumpets, but this is very nice tutorial. Good job.
Its been year since I've played trumpet but after doing the lip clamp it reminded me of how I felt after a full day of practice
I like your style of teaching the hardcore basics good solid ground work on the important foundations. Just like guitar, every body want to sound like this or that. When they need to change a style they had no foundation to refer to. txs
I am a freshman of highschool, but i always go back to these to make sure i am still doing the right things
Thank you so much, i played for 2 years in 4th and 5th grade but stopped, now 5 years later i have decided to start learninf again
FINALLY...someone tells me how to make my oogly expression look ghoulish. All kidding aside, thank you for explaining exactly HOW to form my lips to play. I started on a Harbor Freight Bugle, bought a student trumpet at a pawn shop, hung up my bugle, my grandson brought his Trombone up here, so I'm squeezing a few notes out of Trumpet and Trombone. I love 40's swing music. Carpal tunnel surgery screwed up my guitar playing, so I figured, try playing a horn. I'll be 70 in another month.
Just bought a trumpet and of all the videos I've seen ur the best
Best beginner vid I have seen so far. Could not buzz at first, but on a 1hr ride to town magic happened. Can buzz to the radio now. Gotta get a mouthpiece next after this weird facial feeling subsides. Thx!!
You are number one teacher, Thank you very much. fantastic
I'm a trombonist and this helped me. Thanks! ✌
Greatttttttt thanks a lot from Europe Greece
What I really wanted to see and confirm is between 3:13 - 3:15. Very important. Thank you for the video!
I have watched so many videos in the past few days on how to learn how to buzz and these videos were all made by professional trumpet players and within 5 minutes of YOUR video, I finally understood how the lips and teeth should be. Amazing how much difference there is in the instructor. You're amazing, bud! I don't have my trumpet yet, it's being shipped, but with your small video I can now make higher pitched buzzes with my lips where I was only able to make lower ones before. BTW, I did play French Horn as a kid. And I remember it was EASIER to buzz in those mouthpieces than a trumpet mouthpiece. Maybe because the French Horn is a lower pitched instrument and you can even make some bass sounds from it. So the higher pitched trumpet is more of a challenge.
I'm glad you found it helpful. I have many more videos posted on my channel.
@@christopherwalter1825 yeah I will check them out!
This is one of the better instruction videos, I think.
Thanks a lot Walter for these helpful videos, going to grab my old Besson and Cuesnon flugelhorns. I have 1.5 to 3 CFL mouthpieces, what size is best ? Regards Marc
Such a great beginner lesson - I am 59 year old driving instructor, and want to learn this instrument. Just got a new Mendini yesterday. The 'straw' and 'solo mouthpiece' steps are so helpful! Ready to 'workout'! Thanks Mr. Music Man! I love Music teachers that help all these young students become awesome marching band members!!
Thank you for the lesson
Omg thank you sooo helpful :)
Great first class, Best among other videos.
Super helpful. Big thanks. I'm new new new to trumpet
Wonderful teacher's video to learn how to play the trumpet
This literally helped me so much! Thank you! 🤓
Thank you for such a great teaching video. I played the violin until my Freshman year of HS was very good at it but started to lose interest when I saw my friends who were band members having a lot more fun than I was with marching at football games and stage band opportunities a string player didn’t have 50 years ago so the summer after my Freshman year I talked the band teacher into letting me borrow a tenor saxophone over the summer with the agreement I could have a spot in the HS bank if I could play that saxophone to her satisfaction so when school started I auditioned for my spot in the band and was accepted, loved playing the saxophone but continued playing the violin for the first two years of college because I was offered a tuition scholarship and money was tight but soon the music department at college learned of my music abilities and that I also could play the clarinet along with the saxophone so I got another scholarship offer to play the clarinet which was not my favorite but my saxophone abilities earned me a spot on the college jazz band which I played with until graduation.
I enjoyed my music playing years very much but after college marriage and family and new career got in the way of my music and I stopped playing sad to say but I always thought I would pick it up again when I was older.
Unfortunately health issues got in the way and at age 48 I had a massive stroke and lost the use of my left side but the music urge was still there so I decided I would try once again to teach myself to play another instrument so I chose the trumpet since it could be played with using only one hand and I still had one hand that worked as it should. So bought a student horn and went to work only to learn it wasn’t as easy for me as it was 50 years ago but being retired now I have time to work at it. I’m making progress but needed to watch and read anything I could find about learning to play the trumpet so finding videos like yours were a welcome find for me.
I recently lost my father and the bugler at his military funeral service was a recording which I thought disrespectful so now I’m trying to get good enough to volunteer at the local national cemetery to play taps the way it should be. I have a ways to go but I intend to do it to honor my father and his service
So helpful!! Thank you!
I recently started playing, as a matter of fact I've been visiting trumpet lessons for just over 2 months now. Could give me an advice on using self-tearchers, for example i have downloaded Tonestro, which is supposed to help me learn on my own. Is it adviceable for a newb like me to use such a software for whenever I am unable to visit a teacher?
I would like follow you To be best mister in this instrument mister thanks for all!!
I'm glad I found your video!! I'm in the American Legion honor guard. I'll be 60 in a few weeks, and I never thought about learning the bugle, but I'm bound and determined to learn😁. I have been using the bugle with the recording in it, and I'm not satisfied doing that. A bugle player in another post has let me borrow his bugle to practice with
Hello, what exercises do you recommend to achieve the high-pitched notes of the trumpet, I have done everything and they don't come out ... that's why I can't basically play anything.
Try lip slurs
This is almost Balanced Embouchure but just add the sqeeksound = hold lip clamp, blow and seek the higest pitch and then place trumpet on lips...
Starting with the superman piece is brilliant pedagogy.
Great! John.
Your are great professional
I’m on my seventh year playing French horn and my fourth playing mellophone, I shouldn’t need trumpet lessons but I do 😫😂
GOOD LESSON !
Hello from the future, not so for thou 2020, recently start trumpet very excited but hard. Hope this class give me some insight. Good teacher, cheers.
🎺🎹I'm a big believer in lip buzzing🎺🎹
i likyoue it very much i have a trumpet im in 6th grade im new to trumpet
thank you for your help
How is it going so far? It's harder to make a clean note than I imagined. And I never knew you could play a song without hitting any buttons, just from blowing different sounds from your mouth. That was surprising.
This video helped a lot, I was worried that I couldn't play because I couldn't do the buzz
I’m not in this class, but I goddamn I’m excited!
lmaoooo imma woodwind player but i wanna be in dci so here i am
nice
Hi!
I'm looking into starting to play the trumpet and I've never used an air instrument before. It's full on a first time for me and I'm a bit skittish about investing in something I don't know if I'm going to properly like, as at the moment, all I know is I like the concept of it: would you say it'd be a bad idea to buy the mouthpiece alone, to try if I can do it? If it sticks and I get this exercise right, maybe then I can rent the instrument locally.
Cool, thanks!! Just learning...tried the JHorn today...going to get a trumpet instead.
Great video! I’m sure this helps a lot of your students. What to do if my attempt at buzzing just causes the lips to part and air to whisper through without a buzz at all?
I was a tuba player back in school, haven’t played since…
I always wanted to play trumpet, picked one up recently and I’m having trouble getting the buzz through the small mouth piece
one thing i think is also important that he didnt touch on, have firm and supporting corners on your lips. The inside/center of your lips should be loose and relaxed to buzz
Good video to learn the buzz
You are a great teacher. You made it so simple that even I could understand😉
Thank you🙏🏼
Thank you for the lesson i am fron brasil Sao Paulo
first thank you for your much appreciated im not getting the buzzing im more like hyperventilating
do you use your voice to make the noise or just wind or blowing air
Do the clamped corners allowed the lips to stay relaxed so they vibrate easier or do I keep the lips taunt too?
That's nice 👍 😌
اميرة بكلمتي ...خوش يعزف بس يرادلهة نفس قوي
Christopher Walter Great video! Wow I did not know that the mouthpiece was the instrument and the horn the modifier. Thanks for the info!! And thanks even more for slowly putting them together to hear the difference! I 'm new and I have seen both people play with "a kind of no lip" and "farting noises" and get good sound out of them. Who's right? Both?
SO COOOOOOOOOOOOLLLLLLLLLLLL
Thank you!
Omg thx so much i play like a god now😁😁😁
Thanx sir. Very good ..
very nice explanation
Hello, thank you for all these tips! Can you please someone confirm if all these apply to playing a BUGLE too (lip placement etc.)?
Have you taken a minute to try it and see? Nothing beats trial and error there.
papa victor yes i think all brass instruments has very similar mouth placements and such
Thank you
Thank you very much
Hi Chris, since my lip is similar your and i have difficulty play high tones, wich type of Embouchure advise? which your? number? thanks
dang! this is tough! no vibration. is there moisture around the lips? when i do make a sound- it sounds like prrfft. tongue btwn lips making a frt sound 😮
it's easier for me to make a kazoo sound with my vocal chords and pursed lips. if that is how to do it- now i'm in business!
PespiCorp not to disrespect Chris, but I disagree with basically everything in this video.
In my experience, clamping, mouthpiece buzzing, blowing hard, and playing long tones as much as you can all work together to trash your facial muscles and destroy your embouchure's sensitivity. The tissue of the lips is very delicate and I've gotten better results treating playing as a skill, like whistling , rather than a feat of strength. Just don't exhaust your muscles or press the mouthpiece into the lips and you'll get better as long as you practice experimentally.
PespiCorp me too
PespiCorp i slightly lick my lips, before i play high notes id rather my lips be a little dryer
Matthew Rodriguez i get what you mean but i think chris is just trying to really simplify it for younger kids, but yeah once people get older theyll adapt to what you are saying
I was given this link for an ox war horn.
When you do your lip clamps you said it takes you about 12 minutes to fatigue, that's a loooong time! Are you clamping full strength, continually, that entire time?
I was wondering would the trumpet lip clamp make your lips stiff ?
Anthony Lenzo the corners of your mouth should be firm, but the insides/center of your lips should be loose and buzzing
Lolll how long before I will be able to do all that teacher? But I'm focused
Why i can't keep one note constantly. I am producing sound but it wary like a voice of a teenager ?
Are you from Kansas ? You mentioned Kansas speedway .
From Missouri, work in Kansas
what is the best mouth piece for a beginner
tony williams I’m a fan of the 5C
It is funny to learn 🎺 trumpet 🎺 during lock - downs ❗🤣 ❗ My neighbours are
...........................................................................................................................
At 2:57 mine sounds like that every time can someone help me
Same here
If your tone is pinched or nasally there are a couple things to think about:
First, make sure you teeth are apart about the width of a pencil or straw. Having your teeth too close together inhibits the air flow.
Second, your throat is closed and tense. Lay on the floor, but your hands behind your head and practice breathing long deep breaths. Look into the breathing gym exercises buy stay away from ones that make you practice tension. I am not a fan of those. Another great way to open the throat up is to sing nice low, mellow tones. Think about the FEELING of the throat being open and try to emulate that on your trumpet.
Lastly, and again this is air related - your blowing from your throat or head instead of your diaphragm. Again, breathing exercises to get the feeling of deep full breaths.
Start on your mouthpiece for a while and get your mouthpiece buzz to sound full and resonate. Then move to the horn.
i find whenever i sounded pinched i just need to relax the inner part of my lips
what are the scales of c trumpet
Yes I want to learn don't know anything about it yet
Such obstacles ... Good lesson
Yup!
Best Part @6:32 (y)
Like a kazoo?
12-15 minutes 🤯🤯
It took me 12-15 seconds 🤣🤣
This is my first time doing trumpet and im still not getting how to blow on it
Ačiū už pamoka labai naudinga toną pagauti !
who knew buzzing is difficult. feel deflated but i know the more i practice the better ill get.
You ain’t the only one…lol…I guess, practice, practice, practice. I just started last week!
@@ericcarter2613 keep me updated.
will this be the same for playing s bugle?
I am waking up the deaths ......by practising ........near the CHURCH.......⛪
I come from côte d'Ivoire!!
Bạn có thể dịch sang tiếng việt nam
No. The mouthpiece is NOT the instrument. The instrument is the mouthpiece PLUS the trumpet.
i felt so ticklish with the lips clips thing
No flat chin???
You will have not neighbours any more ......🤣
That me I am