|
Exceptions
Of course, there are the remaining ten
percent who actually benefit from opening things up or adding to the
overall volume of the equipment set up. These are the
exceptions rather than the rule. There are 2 cases where the player
may legitimately look to add onto the volume of their current set up.
The most reliable indicator is the pitch in the upper register. If a
player has no apparent embouchure flaws and plays comfortably into the
upper register, but the intonation flattens off, in spite of the tone
being clear and open, and with no audible drop in the speed of the
air, the chances are that not enough air is moving fast
enough and that the bore of the mouthpiece needs to be opened.
Case number two is the player who feels that
no matter how hard they are blowing, they just do not get enough
volume (decibels). This is a situation that will absolutely be
corrected by going to a larger set up. In both cases, the verifiable
evidence that going larger was the right thing to do is that the tone
will brighten. This means that the air is moving faster! This is also
the reason that certain players, going to a larger back bore, that has
been described as offering a "Dark, Symphonic Sound" will actually
experience a brightening in their sound. They are able to put more air
through faster in a larger space. The larger area did not slow the air
for them (producing a darker sound). Instead, the greater volume
released the air, quickening the velocity and brightening the sound.
The Rehabilitation Process...or Back from the
Brink!
The biggest problem I face when attempting to
rehabilitate a player who has fallen prey to continually adding to
the internal volume of their equipment is that a change to the
mouthpiece alone is not enough. The maxim that "the mouthpiece forms
the player" is too true for good and for bad. In the case of the player who has been
working with equipment that does not offer him enough resistance, the
poor and counter productive habits that he has "reped" into the
body over many years of practice must be dealt with, not only with new
equipment that will shift the balance of the resistance, but also with
new and powerful concepts that will allow him to use his internal
mechanisms in a proper and constructive manner. The old playing
techniques will not work on more efficient equipment. In fact, as we
have shown, the old playing techniques have been working their way
towards undermining solid performance foundations over time. The
"short term fix' that the player experienced every time he went larger
was simply allowing him to get away with increasingly counter
productive habits. Long term he has no where left to go because the
tongue and chords are so completely crushed down that he has very
little left in terms of usable register in which to play. The upper
register has collapsed as has the bottom register. In the upper
register it is painfully obvious that there is no air coming out. No
velocity, no vibration, no sound, no range! In the bottom range the tongue has become so accustomed to being placed so high up that it
acts as a kind of bulwark in stopping the flow of air. If you ask this
player to play any low note loudly, the problem is magnified to a
ridiculous extreme. Nothing will come out! They are often extremely
proud of themselves, thinking that their inability to get even low
notes from a tighter mouthpiece demonstrates what "hard core animals"
they are. The problem with this thinking is that the players who are
doing the loudest and highest playing with the most extreme endurance
rarely use anything near what these poor victims have been lead into
using.
Doing the Work

Retraining the tongue to funnel the air towards
the front of the mouth can be a difficult process. For players who
have large, beautiful tones, but experience difficulty going into the
upper register, the solution can be as simple as correcting any wild
imbalances and misfits in terms of the inner diameter they may present
in their equipment and then introducing them to more positive air flow
techniques. Raising the tongue in the front of the mouth acts to
compress the air, creating the velocity to vibrate the lip and go
easily into the upper register. The player with a good sound simply
needs to use the new technique to extend that sound into the upper
register.
Fig. C
The tongue bring raised in the front of the mouth
I have seen many a player who knows,
intellectually, that this is the way that they should be playing, but
because they have been using a mouthpiece with an overall internal
volume that was too great for them to manipulate, just going through
these motions yielded no results at all for them. They may have
already spent years in the struggle between the tongue moving back on
them without the ability to gain control over it. Without ever having
the experience of how it feels when things work properly, they have no
way to practice proper technique. Instead, they have to believe that
what they are doing is all there is. "Bumping" these players into the
experience of how easy it can be to accelerate the air in an efficient
manner is one of the most gratifying aspects of the work I do.
On the other hand are those players who, because
they have had to crush down the inside of their mouth so severely all
the time, have never really produced a full and vibrant tone in their
entire playing life. They have never actually heard the natural ring
of the instrument. When this is the case, the player loses out on
having one of the most valuable tools any brass player can have in
trying to master the instrument. Staying in the center of a resonant,
full sound is the most self correcting mechanism and very best teacher
a player can have. The player with a "crushed sound" has no natural
pitch center of the instrument to help guide them. Instead, every
other note is twisted and manipulated to the point where what comes
out is usually some curious affectation of what the instrument should
sound like. In these cases, problems are greatly
magnified as one first needs to take the player through the steps that
will allow them, for the first time, to hear and feel what proper tone
production is like. In these cases, just getting the player to
recognize the feeling and the sound enough to know where to go back to
is a major "bump." All this can be pretty tough
work, but the satisfaction of seeing a player performing with ease and
comfort for the first time in their lives is fair compensation. They
never knew it was supposed to be fun!
Fine Tuning
For the player who has consistent tone
production and is adept at properly manipulating the air, the various
elements of the mouthpiece can be tweaked to either speed or slow the
air to produce different qualities in sound and response. Everyone
works with compromises between efficiency and artistic goals in sound
production. How far one can go towards darkening the sound should be
restricted by how well one is able to balance the other aspects of
fine playing, (ie., attack, tone color, ability to play long phrases,
intonation, response) not just treated as an end unto itself that
throws every other aspect over board to gain supremacy. Likewise,
players with especially brittle, edgy or small, bright sounds usually
can afford to take on a bit more in terms of volume to help ease some
of these undesirable characteristics. Intelligent use of integral
equipment...what a concept!

Back to Page 1
|