Turning playable range into dynamic range

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Nolankberk
Posts: 77
Joined: Sep 06, 2023

by Nolankberk »

Hey all,

I've recently been able to get out a double f fairly cleanly, but I can only play up to a high d without A. Getting a very large breath before or B. Voicing the note on a lower octave first.

Does anyone have any exercises they use to make their range more consistent and comfortable? Thanks!
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imsevimse
Posts: 1765
Joined: Apr 29, 2018

by imsevimse » (edited 2023-10-10 3:01 p.m.)

I just play chromatics. One octave. Increase, and take the scale up a halv step higher when ready. Play with dynamics up and down. This is how I increased my range and connected registers. When ready, then you do two ocaves, or three.

/Tom
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Nolankberk
Posts: 77
Joined: Sep 06, 2023

by Nolankberk »

[quote="imsevimse"]I just play chromatics. One octave. Increase, and go a halv step higher when ready. Play with dynamics up and down. This is how I increased my range and connected registers. When ready, then you do two ocaves, or three.

/Tom[/quote]
Thanks Tom. I'll try to manage some quieter high notes and get used to having to use a bit less air
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Burgerbob
Posts: 6327
Joined: Apr 23, 2018

by Burgerbob »

Play music up there.
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tbdana
Posts: 1928
Joined: Apr 08, 2023

by tbdana »

Here are pages from the exercises I do. I do them from low Bb to double Bb. A scale up and down, followed by an arpeggio. Then up a half-step. Repeat all the way up.

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Do it slow, then gradually do it faster and faster.

And when you get that down, start working on interval-scales, like going up F-A-G-Bb-A-C-Bb-D-C-E-D-F-E-G-F and then back down F-D-E-C-D-Bb-C-A-Bb-G-A-F-G-E-F. Do it in half-step intervals like the pages above. And do it with intervals other than thirds, too. Increase speed over time.

I find this develops the range, increases facility, and lets you play actual music up there rather than just hitting an isolated high note.

Works for me. Your mileage may vary.
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timothy42b
Posts: 1812
Joined: Mar 27, 2018

by timothy42b »

Hey, I've seen those pages before!

(Check out the Marshall Gilkes Trombone Warmup video on Youtube. He plays those and a metronome flashes over the notes.)
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Matt_K
Posts: 4809
Joined: Mar 21, 2018

by Matt_K »

Play scales starting at the top, descend, and come back.
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Nolankberk
Posts: 77
Joined: Sep 06, 2023

by Nolankberk »

[quote="tbdana"]Here are pages from the exercises I do. I do them from low Bb to double Bb. A scale up and down, followed by an arpeggio. Then up a half-step. Repeat all the way up.

Screenshot (23).pngScreenshot (24).pngScreenshot (25).pngScreenshot (19).png

Do it slow, then gradually do it faster and faster.

And when you get that down, start working on interval-scales, like going up F-A-G-Bb-A-C-Bb-D-C-E-D-F-E-G-F and then back down F-D-E-C-D-Bb-C-A-Bb-G-A-F-G-E-F. Do it in half-step intervals like the pages above. And do it with intervals other than thirds, too. Increase speed over time.

I find this develops the range, increases facility, and lets you play actual music up there rather than just hitting an isolated high note.

Works for me. Your mileage may vary.[/quote]

These are absolutely amazing this is exactly what is was looking for! Thanks so much