The ONLY sax lesson you'll EVER need (kinda…)

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  • Опубликовано: 15 окт 2024

Комментарии • 240

  • @GetYourSaxTogether
    @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад +10

    Instantly transform YOUR sax skills with this free masterclass▶️ www.getyoursaxtogether.com/masterclass

    • @robertfogleman4889
      @robertfogleman4889 Год назад +1

      All good advice. Here's one more. I had a teacher at Berklee make me play my lessons with as much mouthpiece in my mouth as I could and still get a sound. I had to play entire exercises and etudes this way. Talk about flat! But it did get me to open up and there were LOTS of overtones in the sound.

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад

      @@robertfogleman4889 interesting!

  • @juniorsaxman
    @juniorsaxman Год назад +62

    None of my instructors ever touched on this and I struggled with biting and intonation as well as no body to the sound. I had never known about practicing with just the mouthpiece. Within a few days my tone has changed drastically and I am playing in tune. Master your larynx and master the saxophone. I can’t thank you enough Jamie. This is a GAME CHANGER that I wish I had known 30 years ago. Better late than never I guess. Thanks again Jamie

  • @marksharon49
    @marksharon49 Год назад +15

    Duuuude! I am an absolute beginner at 54 years of age and had stumbled across your channel last night and watched your lesson 3 for beginners and am stoked that "I found you!" (heh heh) I was struggling with my embouchure and your lesson, albeit that I only tried your technique today at 18:45 has already changed my sound "grassy 4r5e maximus" many hours still to go but from one grateful fellow player "thank you!" As you say "get your sax together!" I say "get your sax on!" Chapeau 😀

  • @hollysmusicandmore2243
    @hollysmusicandmore2243 Год назад +6

    You are the most fun sax teacher on here. Thank you!

  • @kiz8409
    @kiz8409 Год назад +4

    This tip would have saved many, many, too many years for me struggling with my embochure.

  • @EloiseBonjean-p6l
    @EloiseBonjean-p6l 9 месяцев назад +3

    About, the title, I am starting fom scratch, I am 64+
    D1:I bought my Dolnet 50's no sound ;) (mouthpiece, neck, saxo)
    D2: a few sounds with mouthpiece or neck, nothing with saxo
    D3: some notes with mouthpiece and neck, nothing with saxo
    D4: this lesson, different notes with mouthpiece, neck and saxo YEPP! thanks
    I mean it is better to start with lesson 1 (from my point of view), great lessons, thanks

  • @lunchbox917
    @lunchbox917 7 месяцев назад +1

    Not even 5 minutes in, and I've learned so much. Thank you for getting right to the point and straight into a solid lesson.

  • @ilachow
    @ilachow Год назад +3

    Great timing Jamie! I just got feedback from a very experienced (40+ years) repair tech/saxophonist who heard me play in his shop. He noted that I was biting too much which caused me to play sharp and pull my MPC out way too far on the cork. He then demonstrated what he meant by playing on my horn with my same MPC and the sound he got blew me away! My sound was airy and thin compared to loud, full, rich sound he got. And he showed me on his tuner how much flatter he was playing. It's exactly what you are talking about. Time to start working on those exercises from TTM! :)

  • @rich4444hrsm
    @rich4444hrsm Год назад +2

    True, transformed my sound. You can also "Kazoo" your sound and it helps. Also, altissimo, is not bite, you sing the note, and then you play it (it is by your throat NOT your embouchure you get the high pitches). If you kazoo 1/2 note down, you get an awesome overblown fast cool growl.

  • @brianmatthews232
    @brianmatthews232 Год назад +3

    The perfect sax teacher!

  • @seeninthedark
    @seeninthedark Месяц назад +1

    got my saxophone 2 days ago, i'm 17, ima try my best 💪

  • @davew7133
    @davew7133 11 месяцев назад +3

    This is really helpful. I'm just starting out and really struggle with hitting the lower notes. I can run down the scale to low B flat, but if I start at low B flat I'm always an octave out and very squeaky. Lots of useful tips for me to try tomorrow, like NOT BITING! Thanks.

  • @monboulou1
    @monboulou1 Год назад +3

    tune sharp, blow flat, INCREDIBLE !
    this is night and day !
    though it is not easy to be steady when blowing flat (using a tuner) : it requires not only a good steady air pressure, but also keeping the "mouth configuration" in the same position steadily

  • @MariMari-to3pm
    @MariMari-to3pm 11 месяцев назад +2

    I saw yesterday for the first time one of your videos. I improved my tone inmediatly with your tips! You are great!

  • @hectorzeronee
    @hectorzeronee 2 месяца назад

    Been playing professionally (mostly classical) for 15 yrs and this has been one of the best, most intuitive videos. Thank you

  • @billganon3357
    @billganon3357 Год назад +4

    Tune sharp and blow flat. Mind...officially...blown. Breakthrough tip. Thanks Jamie.

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад

      Thank you! 🙏🏼

    • @billganon3357
      @billganon3357 Год назад +1

      @@GetYourSaxTogether although I tried this in my practice session today, and my mouthpiece (Wolfe Tayne circa 1980), can only seem to go on so far, so I can't seem to make it sharp. Thoughts (aside from getting a new mouthpiece, which I probably will later this year).

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад

      @@billganon3357 saw off some of your neck? (I’m kidding!!! 🤣)

  • @davidmathews5794
    @davidmathews5794 Год назад +5

    Jamie - thanks for this video! I have been playing a long time, 40+ years and I have struggled with intonation that whole time. Your advice to tune sharp and play flat is what I have been missing for a long, long time. Love the QE2 fog horn reference - my neighbors have commented on my practicing since I watched this video. Keep up the good work!

  • @timtully8015
    @timtully8015 10 месяцев назад +1

    Your expertise, and your articulate understanding of it, compete explosively with your passion for communicating. It's a joy to see and hear.

  • @Androcentus
    @Androcentus Год назад +4

    Best person teaching online! Jamie rocks!

  • @jeffreymassey5541
    @jeffreymassey5541 Год назад +6

    Great job, Jamie. Everything you demonstrated is what my teacher has taught me. All these exercises are good for warming up. Keep up the great work. Love what you do 👍🏾✅️💯🎶🎷

  • @livingtheapocalypse8248
    @livingtheapocalypse8248 Год назад +4

    Thanks Jamie, you are a great, and I mean great, teacher . . "When the disciple is ready, the master appears"

  • @kooky74
    @kooky74 9 месяцев назад +1

    Hello. Thanks for the exercices and your smill 😊

  • @jmix1of1
    @jmix1of1 Год назад +2

    thank you jamie

  • @orangeorange2646
    @orangeorange2646 10 месяцев назад +1

    this video is exactly what I needed!

  • @TV-lg8qg
    @TV-lg8qg Год назад +1

    Thanks so much and have a good weekend ❤❤❤❤

  • @nilsvandergaag3712
    @nilsvandergaag3712 Год назад

    Absolute gamechanger for me! Much richer sound and I'm able to accurately play overtones now!

  • @steveclayton495
    @steveclayton495 Год назад +3

    Hi Jamie,
    Yet another outstanding and easy to understand video! These lessons are priceless. You are by far the best on the net! Very grateful!
    Steve

  • @mareksulzynski
    @mareksulzynski 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you great lesson, I learned today I something totally new👍

  • @86larsonrd
    @86larsonrd Год назад

    This is just what I have been looking for.

  • @jamesmatheka1361
    @jamesmatheka1361 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you. This is valuable!!

  • @Megamember678
    @Megamember678 Год назад +2

    I want to learn this!

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад +2

      Practice hard, Practice smart and above all else Enjoy your music!

  • @cindithom7600
    @cindithom7600 6 месяцев назад +1

    This is one amazing video, super helpful!! I’ve added this to my practicing and wow. I already feel like I’m improving!! Thanks for sharing!!

  • @asiawilk
    @asiawilk 4 месяца назад

    I just started playing 2 weeks ago and I am happy I found this!! :) I can learn it right from the start! I have been struggling with getting a weird sound and this was it, I was biting too hard and not really using my throat properly. Thank you!!

  • @MichaelaLudes
    @MichaelaLudes Год назад +1

    Hi Jamie, your the best instructor and it's so helpful for me as an absolute beginner. Greetings from Germany 😊

  • @ezphd
    @ezphd Год назад +4

    Great presentation Jamie!!! In my big band the lead alto often asks me to “play softer, stay under my sound.” This happens most often when I feel my sound is richest, not really louder. Love your thoughts on this. TIA, Elliot

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад +1

      Yeh I have to tone down my sound a lot to blend in big bands.

  • @matthasmuller5638
    @matthasmuller5638 Год назад +3

    Great lesson Jamie. I wonder how to apply this in the high register on the horn?

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад

      Depends how how you mean, but it’s a general principle for everything you play.

  • @SadanandaUTube
    @SadanandaUTube 10 месяцев назад +2

    I love to play saxophone. Just stating at the age of 57. I am following your good tips. Thak a lot for your blowing tips.

  • @erniesantos7740
    @erniesantos7740 Год назад +1

    Thank you Jamie for a great tip you shared , God bless you more

  • @ibiamgodfavourchukwuemeka8150
    @ibiamgodfavourchukwuemeka8150 3 месяца назад +1

    Amazing thanks for this❤

  • @cheknfaks
    @cheknfaks Год назад +4

    Jamie, I did that loud 'Q-E2 ' foghorn blow you recommended and not good...... All my neighbors showed up at my door with boarding passes.

  • @jaccar2020
    @jaccar2020 Год назад +1

    Thank you Jamie, you have helped me work out what i was trying to do. I have been playing higher octaves on the lower octave to get that relaxed sound then moved up to the top and try and replicate it but now I know how im trying to achieve it. All the best

  • @peterlorenz9766
    @peterlorenz9766 Год назад +1

    Mr.JAMIE
    The AWESOME
    ❤🎷❤
    WIZARD
    thank you so much!
    DANKE SCHÖN ❤🎷❤
    I am so thrilled, pleased, happy and so so motivated by all your tutorials.
    You doing a REAL GREAT JOP for me as a real beginner.
    Professional GUIDANCE is so important. So much needed. So much appreciated when it is done well. VERY VERY WELL like you are DOING it. Thanks.
    Deep ADORATION.
    BIG BIG THANK YOU.
    ❤🎷❤
    You with your
    """GET YOUR /MY SAX TOGETHER"""
    you are making me
    😂 HAPPY AS A HIPPO BLOWING MY TENOR 🎷
    TAKE CARE
    WISH YOU THE BEST
    🙏
    AUM AH HUM VAJRA GURU PADME SIDDHI HUM
    🙏

  • @felipe-kw4mc
    @felipe-kw4mc Год назад +1

    Jamie, sei grande!

  • @mtrcbpg_2012
    @mtrcbpg_2012 Год назад +2

    Great lesson guy

  • @imani8763
    @imani8763 Месяц назад +1

    Xylophone with a blanket 😊

  • @pavelpatsenkov
    @pavelpatsenkov Год назад +1

    Hi Mr Anderson. It's very interesting lesson. Thank you so much!

  • @otmsnp
    @otmsnp Год назад +1

    Refined knowledge like a crystal💪💪

  • @JackSamps
    @JackSamps 11 месяцев назад

    Loved this video! I already train only with the mouthpiece, and its game changing for sure, in one week my sound were something else entirely! One thing I also do is to go the chromatic scale down the lowest I can, it helps a lot too in controlling the amount of air, shape and sound! Subscribed!

  • @tonyhddodge4282
    @tonyhddodge4282 Год назад +1

    Great lesson. Thanks

  • @garymeroff3297
    @garymeroff3297 9 месяцев назад

    Happy New Year Jaime. Great video. I am working on getting my embouchure relaxed, improve my sound, and build endurance. I have struggles with it. Your videos have helped me with this challenge. I greatly appreciate all your videos and love for Saxophone and playing good music. Thanks my Friend : )

  • @MackeeMouseMedia
    @MackeeMouseMedia Год назад +4

    This is so awesome!!! I HAVE A QUESTION - this video makes perfect sense and I've experienced a lot of what you are talking about, but how do you play softly? My particular style on tenor is that soft breathy sound. How do you opn up and play louder as you are suggesting but at "p" dynamics?

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад +2

      Well, you can’t really. You can play in a subtone breathy style but you can’t really do that at a very loud volume.

  • @mikaelalafriz4719
    @mikaelalafriz4719 Год назад +2

    Hi there, just looking for some advice! I know that I’m supposed to tune sharp and play flat, but I seem to have maxed out how far in I can push my mouthpiece. There’s still some cork visible - but I’ve tried narrowing it down with sandpaper, and I still couldn’t get the mouthpiece any deeper in. This leads me to believe that it’s because of the physical structure of either the sax or the mouthpiece that I can’t tune sharp.
    Does this problem ring any bells? Should I start scouting for another mouthpiece, or is there some other hack you’d recommend? At the moment, when I keep my embouchure loose, all my high notes come out flat.

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад

      For a start you might be blowing TOO loose. That’s possible. Everything had a limit. The neck is probably hitting the inside of the mouthpiece chamber?

  • @adi.sax.ardelean
    @adi.sax.ardelean Год назад +2

    Hello! Please tell me when I blow with only the mouthpiece and the neck of the alto saxophone like this with the technique explained by you, what note should be on the tuner? so I can tell if I'm biting too tightly or not. I suspect that if I sing categorically it will be a higher note than it should be! I need a reference from which to start. Thank you.

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад

      I used to give reference pitches, but I don’t do it anymore because there’s a bit more to the equation than just the pitch.

  • @scottlife1697
    @scottlife1697 Год назад +2

    Great video! Keep hearing about mouthpiece exercises but this is the first time I've seen it demonstrated! One quick question though. I can get my low notes bang on, but I get into the palm keys and they flat like pancakes!! 😢 Like, a full half step flat!! Any ideas what might be going sideways? I've found reed placement affects it some, but it's always a struggle. (And if I push the mouthpiece on any further I'm going to punch out my reed, I swear!

  • @aidanburrows4177
    @aidanburrows4177 Год назад +2

    Hi Jamie, thanks for the video - very helpful. I would be very interested in your interpretation of what John Harle calls the reed fan. Do you consciously blow at the reed in different directions? I’d also appreciate some help getting a stronger altissimo range, starting from altissimo G. Cheers

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад

      This for altissimo ruclips.net/video/kURzx_fZ6Ho/видео.html. I don’t blow up and down actually but I know many people teach that as it can be helpful.

  • @finnpeters
    @finnpeters 8 месяцев назад

    Mental Jamie! I love it xx

  • @sweetbushstudiochannel4606
    @sweetbushstudiochannel4606 2 месяца назад +1

    I have a question, I was wondering if I could play soprano sax with no teeth or dentures? Currently I do play bagpipes with no issues because I have developed strong lip and cheek strength.

  • @HelenBaruch
    @HelenBaruch 9 месяцев назад

    I love this, thanks for sharing

  • @JakeLucGoodman
    @JakeLucGoodman Год назад +1

    I could watch this man do frog impression for days ❤

  • @morenoluponi5006
    @morenoluponi5006 Год назад +1

    thanks for the nice content my question is does it apply on the upper register too? I mean the upper secon octave and the palm keys, So you think opening the throat no matter the heught? Thank you

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад

      That’s a bit more of a complicated answer than I can put here!

  • @itwasntme4931
    @itwasntme4931 Год назад +1

    How do you break the habit of changing lip pressure? And how can I get more control of my larynx?

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад +1

      Practice the recommended exercises. You will see improvement after only a few days.

  • @Bwahzehdezooner
    @Bwahzehdezooner Год назад +1

    What about mouthpiece cushions? I tend to bite through them with my upper teeth after several weeks. I don't bite the reed though.

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад +1

      It’s likely that you’re using too much pressure on the top of the mouthpiece with your teeth I’m guessing. Or you might just have very sharp teeth!

  • @reggaebasscovers9230
    @reggaebasscovers9230 Год назад +1

    Hi there, nice vid! One question if you allow me, which i 'm struggling to find the answer : everybody say don't bite, but where does my bottom teeth go then? Are they just like floating under the lips, without even touching them? I've already watched dozen of videos about embouchure and i can't find the answer.
    Great channel, thank you for all your work

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад

      Well, yeh. A bit of your bottom lip cushions between your bottom teeth and the reed.

    • @reggaebasscovers9230
      @reggaebasscovers9230 Год назад +1

      Thank you so much for your answer. I've been trying without the teeth touching the lip but couln't seem to manage to build the embouchure. As i understand it, it's like the "anchor point" for your cheeks muscles to build around.
      Thank you again, it's very nice of you to take time to answer.
      Cheers

  • @amystockley3373
    @amystockley3373 Год назад +1

    Love this J 💕 x

  • @kcwoodwind
    @kcwoodwind Год назад +1

    I have played saxophone since 7th grade. Studied in college and beyond. I am perplexed as to why I can get a great sax tone but I cannot produce a sound other than a high pitched squawking sound when I blow on just the mouthpiece. I can get a sound with the neck attached.
    Also several of my students have their mouthpieces pushed pretty far in on the neck as it is and to blow flat and get a big sound would cause them to choke off the sound by pushing in all the way. Are they on too soft of a reed or is there some other reason they are flat. For years I have told my students to say "ee"" at the back of the tongue to improve intonation and it has worked. Is this wrong as long as they are not biting the reed and have the fish fave embouchure?

    • @kcwoodwind
      @kcwoodwind Год назад +1

      Thank you for all of your videos! They are awesome!

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад

      None of it is wrong if it works! Re your mouthpiece, I can’t diagnose over a RUclips comment. If you go to any video description you can book in a lesson with me and we can look at it there??

  • @marc9089
    @marc9089 Год назад +1

    I liked the first one

  • @cheknfaks
    @cheknfaks Год назад +1

    This sure helps & might be why my sax playing sounded like I was squeezing a sick goose for so long.

  • @DanielPenn
    @DanielPenn Год назад

    Great video!

  • @donkalescky3235
    @donkalescky3235 Год назад +2

    Good morning. What neck strap are you using in this video? Thank you.

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад

      That's a Dave guardala neck strap. Kinda expensive for what it is, but nicely made.

    • @donkalescky3235
      @donkalescky3235 Год назад +1

      @@GetYourSaxTogether Thank you very much. Very nice, but over my price point. Take care.

  • @neonstagerj
    @neonstagerj Год назад +1

    Out of all my Saxophone Teachers that I've had only 1 Teacher cover this

  • @rickstokes2239
    @rickstokes2239 Год назад +13

    I think so many students get caught in the ‘bite’ issue because of the myth that playing a harder reed makes you a better player, but in reality you need to match the reed to the mouthpiece and use your embouchure to contain the air and control the sound.

  • @johnreppel2756
    @johnreppel2756 4 месяца назад +1

    This video hit me like a truck! It's gonna change the way I play woodwinds!

  • @tivanolebang
    @tivanolebang Год назад +1

    Tune sharper and blow flattt... that is great ideaaa..

  • @christophbrylka6256
    @christophbrylka6256 Год назад +4

    Why is voicing never compared to whistling although what is happening in the oral cavity is so similar? Or did I get it completely wrong?

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад +1

      Yup, you’re right. That’s how you change notes when you whistle. Great point. 👍🏻

    • @christophbrylka6256
      @christophbrylka6256 Год назад +1

      @@GetYourSaxTogether I think that makes it a lot easier to explain as many players understand how whistling works and how the tongue moves and the oral cavity changes. Also when whistling you have to hit the right pitch only by using your oral cavity.

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад

      @@christophbrylka6256 fair point.

  • @generalclucks
    @generalclucks Год назад +1

    If i have my lip loose, and dont bite with my lip over my teeth it just sounds really airy. Do i have my lip too loose, or do i just need to blow harder?

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад

      Yeah, try blowing harder or maybe a softer reed?

    • @generalclucks
      @generalclucks Год назад +1

      @@GetYourSaxTogether Thanks, I thought I may have moved up to early

  • @boaz7634
    @boaz7634 Год назад +1

    Hi Jamie. I have a question. I love the full sound I get when I release jaw pressure. But when I release jaw pressure and go from a low A to a high A for example, the A won't go up an octave when pressing down the octave key! It does work when I bite a little bit. How do I jump octaves without adding jaw pressure?

    • @bradfordsmithmusic
      @bradfordsmithmusic Год назад +3

      14:57 answers you question. I’ve been working on voicing and it will transform your sound. Remember Jamie is giving you the clues to teach yourself how to play. The hardest thing to do is unlearn habits, Ugg

    • @boaz7634
      @boaz7634 Год назад

      But will voicing with my throat actually help with this? Because it's not that the notes up an octave are flat or too high. The problem is that when I release jaw pressure and I go up an octave the notes that come out are an octave below, even though I'm pressing the octave key...

    • @frankversteeg8107
      @frankversteeg8107 Год назад

      @@boaz7634 you need to raise the larynx, and at the same time, be aware not to bite the reed, and also keep the muscles in the neck relaxed, there are just a few things going on at the same time, which you all need to control accordingly, maybe a good thing to start, is to separate these, into small practise sessions, in the end, they will fall into place and make sense, and you will do them without thinking about it anymore

    • @bradfordsmithmusic
      @bradfordsmithmusic Год назад +1

      You want to develop awareness of your throat shape or voicing. Overtones is an approach. Do the mouthpiece exercise and work on the bend range while focusing on keeping the lower relaxed, also take in more mouthpiece (this takes the lower lip pressure out of the equation and makes you work on the air stream.) also stuff a rag in the bell, finger low Bb with the octave and play overtones. This will open the throat and then you will have to play with the back of the throat to control your airstream and this is how you get your overtones and your awareness of your voice. Remember, the saxophone is the outer instrument and you have to develop the innerinstrument that starts at the Reed And goes down to your lungs.

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад

      👍🏼 🙏🏼

  • @youbeenchased
    @youbeenchased Год назад +1

    Every time I see Jamie play the horn when his throat opens up it reminds me of a bullfrog 🐸 But dang, does it help create a better sound.

  • @averagemaverik5715
    @averagemaverik5715 Год назад +3

    “Tune sharp, blow flat” this is gold, I read to blow every note like a low Bb and it really helped my tone but noticed I had to sharpen the mouthpiece a lot, I guess I need to continue at this 😅

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад

      👍

    • @enoffz8021
      @enoffz8021 Год назад +2

      The “Tune sharp, blow flat” advice is right because it is so hard to bend notes up, and if you try to you'll mostly choke off the sound. When you loosen up the tone is louder and you have more room for expression and vibrato. Some notes tend to be flat on a saxophone and when you are tuned sharper those notes are easier to correct.

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад +1

      @@enoffz8021 yup!

    • @enoffz8021
      @enoffz8021 Год назад

      Also: If you blow hard with too tight an embouchure, the reed closes of and you get silence. 🤫

  • @Zorin1990
    @Zorin1990 Год назад +1

    Фонемику - конечно надо знать! Это же основа Тембра Саксофона особенно в Роке. я на Фонемике написал целый Рок-Роман на 21000 страниц🎷

  • @ernstlozin6138
    @ernstlozin6138 4 месяца назад

    Hello do you still teach classes now

  • @YasminHeimgreiter
    @YasminHeimgreiter 10 месяцев назад

    omg you safed me

  • @MTNPANTS
    @MTNPANTS Год назад +2

    But you found a stock image of a xylophone with a blanket on it 😂

  • @emscots2780
    @emscots2780 Год назад +1

    Great Jamie

  • @medusa210562
    @medusa210562 Месяц назад +1

    I teach saxophone.
    Sometimes, most of the time, I am not telling my students exactly what they have to do. The instruction itself could be too much for them.
    I nudge them in the right direction.
    I don't know how to explain it.

  • @KrisVComm
    @KrisVComm Год назад +1

    This is the most important lesson for sound correction.
    Lesson #2 is harder and it’s called “Be Michael Brecker”

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад

      yeh, you know that! Although it's probably even harder to "Be Kris Lewis".

    • @KrisVComm
      @KrisVComm Год назад +1

      @@GetYourSaxTogether HAHAHA!! Where do I send my $20 to?

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад

      @@KrisVComm 🤣

  • @LaurieSavage
    @LaurieSavage Год назад +1

    "Trying to play a xylophone with a blanket on it"! Great description. I spend ages in my practice room with my teeth off the mouthpiece, it's slowly paying off, especially on the bari.

  • @Lifelesslion21
    @Lifelesslion21 4 месяца назад +1

    I'm finding it hard getting a good sound out, I'm a complete beginner lol

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  4 месяца назад

      Yeah. Go back to my beginner playlist!

    • @Lifelesslion21
      @Lifelesslion21 4 месяца назад +1

      ​@GetYourSaxTogether I've watched it over twice I just have to make the time to practice without annoying my wife 😅

  • @lootsorrow
    @lootsorrow Год назад +2

    Looks like Jamie broke into Jay's studio and stole his wood/acoustic foam panelling.

  • @sorenfuhrer401
    @sorenfuhrer401 Год назад +2

    8:50 now don't watch any videos of Ralph Bowen to see that:)

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад

      Look at Ralph's throat at the 32 min mark - ruclips.net/video/r9J3B_6LBrE/видео.html

    • @sorenfuhrer401
      @sorenfuhrer401 Год назад +1

      @@GetYourSaxTogether yes, yes, you are right. But come on. I was joking because he is so well known for having such a composed expression while playing :)

  • @luisjorgepoveda4362
    @luisjorgepoveda4362 7 месяцев назад

    Early on, I made the mistake of letting the weight of the saxophone rest on my lower lip. In order to let the reed vibrate, it's extremely important to make sure you're supporting the sax with your upper teeth to let your jaw free 😉

  • @olafstenzel2684
    @olafstenzel2684 Год назад +2

    Voice don‘t bite is the opposite of what Sigurd Rascher taught. But he was a more „classic“ Player…
    And that is not the sound we want…😊

  • @matsm1224
    @matsm1224 Год назад +1

    I vind it very hard to play high notes without biting

  • @brettrhea9179
    @brettrhea9179 6 месяцев назад +1

    Hello algorithm

  • @tomotoole8589
    @tomotoole8589 3 месяца назад +1

    Having lost bottom teeth, what difference does this have on the bite?

  • @RutherfordRyan1
    @RutherfordRyan1 6 месяцев назад +1

    Leaking, badly maintained sax can induce these forcing habits also
    Ask me how I know….sax must be operating properly to blow comfortably

  • @Sue20022010
    @Sue20022010 Год назад +1

    Cheers! Have a cupa on me

  • @V081WLBlue
    @V081WLBlue Год назад +2

    Is a saxophone supposed to be so loud!!!! How the hell do you play along with others without drowning them out!!! Is it possible be play softer??

    • @GetYourSaxTogether
      @GetYourSaxTogether  Год назад +1

      Yeh of course you can play soft, but actually I usually find myself drowned out in bands!

  • @vannigio6234
    @vannigio6234 Год назад +1

    🐻👍👍👍💥💥💥🎷💥💥💥 uah!

  • @grahamshuttleworth6903
    @grahamshuttleworth6903 Год назад +1

    Like a digerery do ?

  • @5420
    @5420 7 месяцев назад

    a saxophone lesson