I want to join dci so bad but I play trombone and I’m not sure if I can develop the finger technique to be good enough on baritone but I’m still gonna try!
I play trombone too. Trombone to baritone seems daunting but with slide to valve charts, it's really simple transition and you just have to memorize valve positions like you would memorize slide positions. Scales and Arpeggios.
Trombone to baritone is a lot of fun and I would try it out if I were you. The only part that I feel is difficult as far as fingerings go would be those 16th note runs but I feel like in a lot of lower corps you don't see those as often and if you do they are on lead baritone parts. Also, all trombone slides correlate to bari/euph fingerings. 1st = open 2nd = 2 3rd = 1 4th = 12 5th = 23 6th = 13 and 7 = 123. Thinking of it like that helped me a lot with the transition.
I also play trombone but I can easily play baritone - the embouchure is the same and I got pretty good at the fingering just by fingering trombone parts I have at random times - I used to do that when I played saxophone with my saxophone parts, but with trombone I don't want to imitate the slide, so fingering it is easier.
So i dont m ow much about baritone but for tuba most things (in the staff for us above for yall) always have different fongering that the ones down an octave luke normally a high d wpuld be open and c wpuld be 1. So i dont know if thats a you thing ir a bluecoats thing. Just asking.
As a bari player, i’d just like to tell you hes 9 times out of 10 doing those extra fingerings because of tuning tendencies. As you go higher on the baritone, the notes become sharper, which means putting down extra fingers is an easy way to bypass that
Great transcription!
The One and ONLY! Thanks man. You're a great player. I aspire to be able to play like you one day.
I had this goofey ahh dream
Should've had that in the real audio tbh.
THE PROP WENT OVER THEM????
I want to join dci so bad but I play trombone and I’m not sure if I can develop the finger technique to be good enough on baritone but I’m still gonna try!
I play trombone too. Trombone to baritone seems daunting but with slide to valve charts, it's really simple transition and you just have to memorize valve positions like you would memorize slide positions. Scales and Arpeggios.
Trombone to baritone is a lot of fun and I would try it out if I were you. The only part that I feel is difficult as far as fingerings go would be those 16th note runs but I feel like in a lot of lower corps you don't see those as often and if you do they are on lead baritone parts. Also, all trombone slides correlate to bari/euph fingerings. 1st = open 2nd = 2 3rd = 1 4th = 12 5th = 23 6th = 13 and 7 = 123. Thinking of it like that helped me a lot with the transition.
I also play trombone but I can easily play baritone - the embouchure is the same and I got pretty good at the fingering just by fingering trombone parts I have at random times - I used to do that when I played saxophone with my saxophone parts, but with trombone I don't want to imitate the slide, so fingering it is easier.
5:45 the turf slide hurt me bro😬😬😬
So i dont m ow much about baritone but for tuba most things (in the staff for us above for yall) always have different fongering that the ones down an octave luke normally a high d wpuld be open and c wpuld be 1. So i dont know if thats a you thing ir a bluecoats thing. Just asking.
yeah thats how it is for valved brass, the higher you go, the less fingers.
most likely the fingerings used are reflective of what would make phrasing easier, and for sections to be more in-sync
As a bari player, i’d just like to tell you hes 9 times out of 10 doing those extra fingerings because of tuning tendencies. As you go higher on the baritone, the notes become sharper, which means putting down extra fingers is an easy way to bypass that
why so late lmao
@@40wolfmarim95 Did it for fun lmao