Ralph R. Hall
[email protected]
Ralph R. Hall
http://www.brasshausmusic.com

Ed Glick makes a good point and brings up an important topic.

I, too, went through conservatoire without buzzing and, almost by  
extension, without playing flexibilities.
I now (seriously) feel deprived because many of the playing problems  
one naturally experiences in a long career, amateur or professional,  
can be avoided by careful embouchure guidance and remedial work at the  
outset. When I spent all my student grant on records, particularly the  
Vienna Phil., I started to ask questions as to why my horn professor  
never seemed to slur convincingly over larger intervals than a second.  
When I began playing professionally, still as a student, it was as an  
extra in Mahler, Bruckner, Strauss etc. and the slurring of my  
colleagues was just not on the same plane as Freiburg, Berger et al.

Many years later I worked with John Ridgeon who was the greatest and  
first disciple of Arnold Jacobs in the UK. He, as a trumpet player,  
had serious embouchure problems at conservatoire and as a consequence  
devoted his professional life to the study of the physiology of brass  
playing - his publications are well worth serious study. He was an  
advocate of buzzing and always maintained that playing levels could be  
sustained just by the extensive buzzing of flexibilities on the  
mouthpiece alone, when time and circumstances prevent usual practise  
methods.

In my own teaching I advocate buzzing for two reasons. Firstly as a  
pre-warm up to get the lips vibrating. How often, after a big blow the  
night before, have you heard players struggling to even make a sound  
on the instrument. It comes eventually but the initial efforts can be  
embarrassing! Buzz through the mouthpiece a few one octave scales and  
then slur the arpeggios of same.

Secondly, buzzing is an essential embouchure check, either for  
yourself or your pupils. If the buzzing 'noise' coming out of the  
mouthpiece alone is 'pure', and without the accompaniment of blowing  
through gravel effects and a predominance of air to buzz, then the  
buzzing 'noise' will have some acoustical value and worth. Remember  
that whatever you put into the instrument will inevitably come out of  
the other end - good or bad! An inherently poor embouchure buzz will  
translate itself into a less than beautiful horn sound and that's  
apart from the question it poses about what else is deficient in the  
embouchure and the affect that deficiency might have on other aspects  
of playing.

Ralph R. Hall








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