Warm up books

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Kuwagatton
Posts: 4
Joined: Oct 01, 2024

by Kuwagatton »

Hi, I'm struggling to find a good warm up routine to do before I preform and was looking to get a warm up book to give me an idea on what to do. Any recommendations?
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BGuttman
Posts: 7368
Joined: Mar 22, 2018

by BGuttman »

I'm old school. I use the Remington Warmups (edited edition by Hunsberger). The original Remington Warmups are available on IMSLP for free, but the exercises are somewhat limited.

There are some other great warmup books. I've heard good things about the Brad Edwards. There is a "20 Minute Warmup" that has been around for quite a while. I'm sure others will chime in with their favorites.
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Lhbone
Posts: 372
Joined: Sep 01, 2019

by Lhbone »

Michael Davis 10, 15, 20 Minute Warm Ups are all good. David Vining Daily Routines. A condensed/abridged version of the Alessi routine or Alessi Music Studios.
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Bach5G
Posts: 2874
Joined: Apr 07, 2018

by Bach5G »

Ilan Morgenstern compiled a book of exercises, The Trombone Exercise Library Project.
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chouston3
Posts: 167
Joined: Dec 19, 2023

by chouston3 »

Before I perform, I don't do much because I don't have great endurance. Brad Edwards has a six minute warmup routine which is enough to get me going but not wear me out.
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Fidbone
Posts: 383
Joined: Apr 24, 2018

by Fidbone »

I have a great warm up book by Mark Nightingale (Warwick Music) a bit more interesting harmonically than the usuals <EMOJI seq="1f44d-1f3fc" tseq="1f44d-1f3fc">👍🏼</EMOJI>
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hwlentz
Posts: 56
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by hwlentz »

Ditto on the old school. My warm up was hand written Remingtons (long since memorized) by my undergrad teacher, a student of his. Didn’t realize they were on IMSLP though!
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dembones
Posts: 90
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by dembones »

I've been using the Brad Edwards book "First Habits" for a couple of years now. Highly recommend. He outlines both a normal warmup and a quick warmup if you're short on time. I do the normal one every day, with a variation here and there, which has done wonders for my playing. And there are more in-depth exercises in each of the fundamental areas.

https://www.hornbonepress.com/books/fh
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Bach5G
Posts: 2874
Joined: Apr 07, 2018

by Bach5G »

Urbie Green’s An Hour A Day.
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marccromme
Posts: 457
Joined: Mar 30, 2018

by marccromme »

Ohh, have a look at our tuba friends - I really enjoy these series of exercises. Maybe just after a short warmup ... Chris Olka drill of the week .. https://chrisolka.com/drill-of-the-week/
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JLivi
Posts: 870
Joined: May 10, 2018

by JLivi »

I'm a big fan of the following books that I've pulled exercises from to create my warmup routine

Schlossberg Daily Drills

Technical Studies by Clarke

Lip Slurs by Brad Edwards

I've also done Remingtons in the past for my long tone work.

But for warming up I'm always trying to touch these fundamentals

Long tones

Lip Slurs

Articulations

Slide technique (scales or patterns)

Buzzing (if something doesn't feel right)

Also worth noting that I rarely go above a high F (2 ledger lines above staff) in my warmup. I may target something higher like a high Bb, C or D, but it's generally specific to what I'm about to play.
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dukesboneman
Posts: 935
Joined: Apr 02, 2018

by dukesboneman »

I use the Remington Warmups and The David Vining book
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Scotzen
Posts: 194
Joined: May 20, 2018

by Scotzen »

These are not books, but this is what I do when I warm up before a gig or a practice session

Breathing and Buzzing

Mark Fisher

Breathing - <YOUTUBE id="3SAZKlff--U">https://youtu.be/3SAZKlff--U?si=HsVd3MbqQQSp7U70</YOUTUBE>

Buzzing - <YOUTUBE id="MTqACNoSC3I">https://youtu.be/MTqACNoSC3I?si=R2zC_agg3qXTQ96i</YOUTUBE>

Set Up

Bob Sanders

<LINK_TEXT text="https://bobsanders.net/uploads/3/5/1/3/ ... p-2024.jpg">https://bobsanders.net/uploads/3/5/1/3/35130397/set-up-2024.jpg</LINK_TEXT>

Quick Warm Up

Sam Woodhead’s Warm Up - Copy of Routine

<LINK_TEXT text="https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/ ... drive_link">https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1Q8ZF7BPgWuHtq37vnQLkWZCDG3I62Wdy?usp=drive_link</LINK_TEXT>

Low Range

James Markey

Part 1 - <YOUTUBE id="0zbfyhzRmF8">https://youtu.be/0zbfyhzRmF8?si=PR5Pz0njtTc4Om5y</YOUTUBE>

Part 2 - <YOUTUBE id="l7wVVSwCcCk">https://youtu.be/l7wVVSwCcCk?si=5Irs5m8CJ3mtTBKN</YOUTUBE>

Part 3 - <YOUTUBE id="AqB3BpLbwnI">https://youtu.be/AqB3BpLbwnI?si=cTo2jycjxcOOfIb-</YOUTUBE>

Part 4 - <YOUTUBE id="iJUnm-044Z0">https://youtu.be/iJUnm-044Z0?si=_phK1HBqHAInMa-t</YOUTUBE>
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Scotzen
Posts: 194
Joined: May 20, 2018

by Scotzen »

Three Books I Like are:

Megumi Kanda - Trombone Unlimited

Vernon - The Singing Trombone

Pete Gane - Circuit Training
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MStarke
Posts: 1031
Joined: Jan 01, 2019

by MStarke »

If it's really just about warming up before performance (be it rehearsal or concert) and not about fundamentals practicing, I would recommend to find the shortest possible way for you to get ready. This should only take a few minutes in my opinion.

My ideal warm-up is about 3-5 minutes of simple scales on the mouthpiece and then again 3-5 minutes some combined long tones, tonguing and slurring on the instrument.

For a +-1 hour fundamentals practice (on tenor) I can recommend the Urbie Green method that someone mentioned above. However - honestly - when I have played through that method or most of it as intended, I need a break after that. That's not a warm-up, but more like HIIT (high-intensity interval training) on trombone...
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Chatname
Posts: 233
Joined: Oct 19, 2019

by Chatname »

I agree, the Urbie Green book is fantastic. And he states in the preface that it’s a maintenance method and not for beginners. It’s for days with no gigs. All you need to practice on those days, unless you want to develop instead of only maintaining, then you might want to play some more. So not a warm up at all. Great practice session though.

Also, maybe Ferenc Steiner’s book of Everyday Practice was already mentioned. Otherwise, it’s a pearl of a book and I think it does not get appreciated enough outside of Hungary. Hungary has an amazing tradition of brass playing and teaching. This book is unlike anything else. Great stuff, just make sure to read the preface even in this book, to understand the system.