On Saturday, March 26, 2005, at 01:34 PM, Shanna Hollich wrote:
The rest of your comments were pretty much what I
expected and were helpful - I appreciate it. (You
better believe that Kopprasch and I are becoming fast
friends, heh.)
Something else I find interesting - you suggested
working on the
Paul,
I thank you for all of your comments. I just have a
couple of quick notes.
> Shanna, some thoughts for you. One, you apparently
> switched from tpt to horn. It could be that you
> haven't finished changing from one instrument to the
> other yet; in other words, you are not yet
> comfortab
Shanna, some thoughts for you. One, you apparently switched from tpt to horn.
It could be that you haven't finished changing from one instrument to the other
yet; in other words, you are not yet comfortable with horn. Second, your horn
mouthpiece might be inadequate. You well may not have fo
Step by step going higher , one step a week.
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, March 25, 2005 4:09 AM
To: horn@music.memphis.edu
Subject: Re: [Hornlist] "Speak-easy" high range.
How do you actually
How do you actually condition your high range?
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So for the past three weeks or so I've been playing
trumpet in the pit band for the musical Hair. It's
been an, er, interesting experience, to say the least.
My question is thus... every now and then when I'm
playing the trumpet, I can find a "sweet spot" of
sorts where the upper range just speak
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