This fine, well trained young artist is on his way to a brilliant career. The World is in need of artists of all types. Only highly evolved humans can create all kinds of beautry. Bravo to all artists!!
Tak ten je neskutečný. Já chodil na trumpetu 6 let, a jelikož nemám talent, tak jsem samozřejmě takhle nikdy nehrál a hrát nebudu ;) Můžu jenom tiše závidět.
First question you ask yourself is: "Would I pay money to listen to this performance... and if not, why not? That, by itself, will cause you to listen to yourself and help you discover where the problem areas lie. Right from the outset, remember that you are playing music and that phrasing is paramount. You rush and lack the phrasing of a great vocalist. If you want to become better, then sing the phrase like Luciano Pavoratti or play it like Itzhak Perlman in his 1980 performance of the Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto with the Phila Orchestra. AIR is the foundation of everything. For a person of your age, you generally have it, but still need some more work. Continuity of AIR is a must at all times... and when you come to the end of a phrase, don't just let the air gush out. It is sloppy and shows you dont have enough respect for yourself. Instead, you must hold that note to the FULLEST of its written duration on the sheet music at a consistent volume. Recommend using a metronome in order to fully ground yourself. While the "theme" was certainly easy for you. There is NO excuse for rushing it whatsoever. You were being sloppy. Also, in the last Variation, before the cadenza, you got a bit sloppy rather than work on it enough so that you had absolute mastery of the entire variation. Also, improve your posture by arching your back more so you improve your lung capacity and AIR. You will feel more in command of everything if you do this, and you will have better control. PRACTICE, PRACTICE PRACTICE... But also do it smartly, with no compromises to excellence.
no way you're really criticizing this 14 y/o for almost nailing one of the most challenging solos on trumpet, I'm sure he and/or his teacher know what to work on
@@ryangreen9378 You are mistaken on 2 fronts. First, I am not NAILING him. And second, if a performer is to improve, then they must focus on the areas where they NEED improvement. I agree that Jaromir shows great promise, but speed is NOT the "end all to be all." And if you are being honest, he was REALLY sloppy in the beginning. But according to you, adherence to actual tempo means nothing because he's 14. I beg to differ. My teachers would have crucified me for being so sloppy. Also, at WHAT age will you expect that he will cease being sloppy ???
I completely agree. It was a fantastic attraction. And it would certainly look good in a cirrus, but.. The music is different. Small thoughts, expressions, accents, musical arcs. But you can achieve it with practice and listening to a lot of music. Good practice!
@@Jaegertiger nah shut up. he said that the kid nailed the solo, so first learn how to read. Also, when you give criticism, ALWAYS GIVE A COMPLIMENT FIRST!!! Just criticizing comes across really harshly. And he's very good for 14
Don't understand why when my posture is similar to most outstanding young players like this one (I mean not straight) I can barely blow a note. As I always notice almost all outstanding adults have straight and super straight postures but young ones can play not worse than adults with poor postures. It's a mystery to me. Is something gonna change after a certain age in human physiology. Cuz when I was young I didn't care about how straight I was but now my first action is to take and keep a straight posture otherwise no much sound would come out of my trumpet. To me no posture no air but young players blow well regardless of how straight they are
Sloppy posture leads to sloppy playing. There is no excuse for either. Doesn't matter if younger players "appear" to get away with bad posture. It already tells you they are NOT committed to excellence, and their sloppiness will lead to other compromising things in their playing over time.
@@jam3s3243 I really practiced a lot when I was a college student cuz my dream was to become a good trumpet player. Nobody taught me how to play, instead I was taught musical things how to make phrases and stuff. I kinda wasted my time in terms of trumpet technique. Now I more or less understand how to play and do have progress although I play 3-4 times a week. For me it's even better to practice this way cuz your chops are always fresh and ready for the next session. When the chops are not fresh it's easy to get a bad habit which is to use them instead of air. All I do is just trumpet related exercises without a trumpet. I've never had the sound I have now, never had the stamina I have now and many many more. I spent over 10 yrs to understand that the time u spend playing on the trumpet does not corelate with the result unless u practice in the correct way. It's how u practice not how long and how much u practice.
I thought I was listening to Wynton Marsalis for a moment there! AMAZING!!!
Bravo! That was amazing....and only 14 years old. Well done 👏
Thank you
Bravo! 👏👏👏
Молодец! Хорошее исполнение.
Very Good ✊️🎺
This fine, well trained young artist is on his way to a brilliant career. The World is in need of artists of all types. Only highly evolved humans can create all kinds of beautry. Bravo to all artists!!
Krásne ,super ,dekuji ...
Amazing!
Bravoooooooo
Tak ten je neskutečný. Já chodil na trumpetu 6 let, a jelikož nemám talent, tak jsem samozřejmě takhle nikdy nehrál a hrát nebudu ;) Můžu jenom tiše závidět.
Love it!!
Bravo bro, I love the way you play😍🤩
Bravo!!!
Amazing fantastic👌👌👌
DAYUMM
very nice. keep practicing.
molodec
HI JEROMIR, GREAT HORN, FANTASTIC !!!!!!!!!!!! BRAVISSIMO !!!!!!!!!!!! BIG HUG, FROM RIO DE JANEIRO CITY BRASIL.
La postura della bocca è identica a quella di Nakariakov. Potrebbe essere un ottimo auspicio...
Where did you get this music piece?
Russian song about young girl,who dont want red dress,then song ukrain,about two friends,it umor song.then old Russian gimn .good boy!
What a mouthpiece??
Vincent Bach 3C
How old are you?
14 years
Znám pomalejší verzi.
Já taky , ale rychlejší je to samozřejmě těžší
First question you ask yourself is: "Would I pay money to listen to this performance... and if not, why not? That, by itself, will cause you to listen to yourself and help you discover where the problem areas lie. Right from the outset, remember that you are playing music and that phrasing is paramount. You rush and lack the phrasing of a great vocalist. If you want to become better, then sing the phrase like Luciano Pavoratti or play it like Itzhak Perlman in his 1980 performance of the Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto with the Phila Orchestra.
AIR is the foundation of everything. For a person of your age, you generally have it, but still need some more work. Continuity of AIR is a must at all times... and when you come to the end of a phrase, don't just let the air gush out. It is sloppy and shows you dont have enough respect for yourself. Instead, you must hold that note to the FULLEST of its written duration on the sheet music at a consistent volume.
Recommend using a metronome in order to fully ground yourself. While the "theme" was certainly easy for you. There is NO excuse for rushing it whatsoever. You were being sloppy. Also, in the last Variation, before the cadenza, you got a bit sloppy rather than work on it enough so that you had absolute mastery of the entire variation. Also, improve your posture by arching your back more so you improve your lung capacity and AIR. You will feel more in command of everything if you do this, and you will have better control.
PRACTICE, PRACTICE PRACTICE... But also do it smartly, with no compromises to excellence.
no way you're really criticizing this 14 y/o for almost nailing one of the most challenging solos on trumpet, I'm sure he and/or his teacher know what to work on
@@ryangreen9378 You are mistaken on 2 fronts. First, I am not NAILING him. And second, if a performer is to improve, then they must focus on the areas where they NEED improvement. I agree that Jaromir shows great promise, but speed is NOT the "end all to be all." And if you are being honest, he was REALLY sloppy in the beginning. But according to you, adherence to actual tempo means nothing because he's 14. I beg to differ. My teachers would have crucified me for being so sloppy. Also, at WHAT age will you expect that he will cease being sloppy ???
@@ryangreen9378 thank you, very much
I completely agree.
It was a fantastic attraction. And it would certainly look good in a cirrus, but..
The music is different. Small thoughts, expressions, accents, musical arcs.
But you can achieve it with practice and listening to a lot of music.
Good practice!
@@Jaegertiger nah shut up. he said that the kid nailed the solo, so first learn how to read. Also, when you give criticism, ALWAYS GIVE A COMPLIMENT FIRST!!! Just criticizing comes across really harshly. And he's very good for 14
Don't understand why when my posture is similar to most outstanding young players like this one (I mean not straight) I can barely blow a note. As I always notice almost all outstanding adults have straight and super straight postures but young ones can play not worse than adults with poor postures. It's a mystery to me. Is something gonna change after a certain age in human physiology. Cuz when I was young I didn't care about how straight I was but now my first action is to take and keep a straight posture otherwise no much sound would come out of my trumpet. To me no posture no air but young players blow well regardless of how straight they are
Sloppy posture leads to sloppy playing. There is no excuse for either. Doesn't matter if younger players "appear" to get away with bad posture. It already tells you they are NOT committed to excellence, and their sloppiness will lead to other compromising things in their playing over time.
posture is not correlated with ability as much as you think - you can't play cuz you don't practice enough
@@jam3s3243 I really practiced a lot when I was a college student cuz my dream was to become a good trumpet player. Nobody taught me how to play, instead I was taught musical things how to make phrases and stuff. I kinda wasted my time in terms of trumpet technique. Now I more or less understand how to play and do have progress although I play 3-4 times a week. For me it's even better to practice this way cuz your chops are always fresh and ready for the next session. When the chops are not fresh it's easy to get a bad habit which is to use them instead of air.
All I do is just trumpet related exercises without a trumpet. I've never had the sound I have now, never had the stamina I have now and many many more.
I spent over 10 yrs to understand that the time u spend playing on the trumpet does not corelate with the result unless u practice in the correct way. It's how u practice not how long and how much u practice.