Exploring new YouTube ideas

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nbulgarino
Posts: 51
Joined: May 26, 2018

by nbulgarino »

Hey everyone!

I am toying with the idea of making some YouTube videos on trombone topics and playing some arrangements. What would you guys want to listen to or hear talked about?

I'm interested to hear your thoughts!

Nick
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Wilktone
Posts: 720
Joined: Mar 27, 2018

by Wilktone »

What do you want to talk about? What are your goals in creating a YouTube channel?

If it's just for the fun of it and to have something you can share with a niche audience, then you'll be more successful it you just be yourself and do what you'd like to do. If you have a particular topic or skill you have some expertise in, then maybe you want to focus on that.

If you're interested in monitizing your channel and get lots of subscribers, then you might do better to make it a channel that's less about trombone specifically and do stuff that has a broader musical appeal.

Good luck!

Dave
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ArbanRubank
Posts: 424
Joined: Feb 23, 2019

by ArbanRubank »

YouTube videos need recording equipment and technique. Maybe start there? Walk everyone through it, step-by-step. There might be some begets from it.
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nbulgarino
Posts: 51
Joined: May 26, 2018

by nbulgarino »

Honestly, it would be just for the fun of it. There are trombone YouTubers who have already talk about a number of topics and play great arrangements, so I don't really know what new ideas I could bring to the table.

I have a fascination with equipment and own some cool instruments and mouthpieces. I could make a few videos on the history of the horns, but I am not an advocate of focusing on them anymore. It can very easily become a way to shift blame from the Indian to the Arrow, so-to-speak.

I have an obsession with musical history and obscure composers. I wrote a lengthy paper on Hans Rott while I was at Peabody, and that alone opened my up to a lot of new ideas about music history, how to listen to music and who the people who write music are and why they write. There are a lot of obscure figures in music history that are very interesting that we don't get to learn about in school.

What I want to avoid is being another "talking head" that gives his opinions on topics that have been discussed to death already. That's why I put this "feeler" out there. What hasn't been talked about that people are curious about?

I love to do research and if a topic looks like it has promise or will teach us something, I'll grab my scuba gear and deep-dive into it.
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nbulgarino
Posts: 51
Joined: May 26, 2018

by nbulgarino »

[quote="ArbanRubank"]YouTube videos need recording equipment and technique. Maybe start there? Walk everyone through it, step-by-step. There might be some begets from it.[/quote]

I do a lot of "Zoom" recording projects so I have good enough equipment to produce a YouTube video. I was in this video for Endless Mountain Music Festival (<VIMEO id="433697049">https://vimeo.com/433697049)</VIMEO> and this one for the Washington Cornett and Sackbutt Ensemble (<YOUTUBE id="kNoAihRgtpw"><LINK_TEXT text="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kNoAihR ... ttEnsemble">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kNoAihRgtpw&ab_channel=WashingtonCornettandSackbuttEnsemble</LINK_TEXT>).</YOUTUBE> I recorded the video and audio for these and sent them to be mixed.
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WilliamLang
Posts: 636
Joined: Nov 22, 2019

by WilliamLang »

put up what you like and know

"I have an obsession with musical history and obscure composers."
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TriJim
Posts: 62
Joined: Mar 25, 2018

by TriJim »

Please - if I can ask one thing - keep them short. 3 minutes.

If you can make your point quickly - I'll listen - and maybe come back for your next video. I won't stay to watch the water heat to a boil.

Aggressively edit for time. Good luck.
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Savio
Posts: 688
Joined: Apr 26, 2018

by Savio »

There is not much about trombone history on YouTube, so I second that idea. Or music history in general. Music development.

Leif
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Elow
Posts: 1924
Joined: Mar 02, 2020

by Elow »

I prefer long videos, like 20-30 minutes is ideal
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harrisonreed
Posts: 6479
Joined: Aug 17, 2018

by harrisonreed »

Ones that directly compete with everyone else doing excerpt videos, multi-tracks, and "master"classes. Except blow them out of the water and show em who's boss.
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nbulgarino
Posts: 51
Joined: May 26, 2018

by nbulgarino »

[quote="harrisonreed"]Ones that directly compete with everyone else doing excerpt videos, multi-tracks, and "master"classes. Except blow them out of the water and show em who's boss.[/quote]

Oh I'll definitley do these videos! I love doing multitracks.

One thing that I have been doing is playing on a straight Bach 42. I might make a video on the benefits of playing on a straight horn for a month.
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nbulgarino
Posts: 51
Joined: May 26, 2018

by nbulgarino »

I'll try some multitracks to start. I want to get better at intonation (don't we all?) so I decided that the best way to do this is playing on a straight Bach 42 and really be forced to use 5th, 6th and 7th positions. Let me know what you think!

<YOUTUBE id="5IoIKyizdBI"><LINK_TEXT text="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5IoIKyi ... sBulgarino">https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5IoIKyizdBI&ab_channel=NicholasBulgarino</LINK_TEXT></YOUTUBE>
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Reedman1
Posts: 310
Joined: Apr 14, 2018

by Reedman1 »

I never heard of Hans Rott, and I would love to know more about opening up your musical thinking. But as TriJim said, please keep them short, or at least concise. Chapters are cool, where one video leads to the next, with an opportunity for a break.