Is bigger always better?

B
Bonehenge
Posts: 67
Joined: Nov 12, 2021

by Bonehenge » (edited 2025-10-24 9:45 p.m.)

…..
B
Burgerbob
Posts: 6327
Joined: Apr 23, 2018

by Burgerbob »

Texas?
B
Bonehenge
Posts: 67
Joined: Nov 12, 2021

by Bonehenge »

Of course. Where else? Selmer should take a .5G and label it the MAGATone mouthpiece.
C
Chronos91
Posts: 64
Joined: Jul 10, 2022

by Chronos91 »

Do you think they'd be swayed by evidence? If you have access to some smaller equipment, you could maybe let them see the difference that you could get by letting the kids use appropriate mouthpieces and horns with some recording A&B set ups.

How did a non-brass player even get an opinion that strong on the matter?
P
Posaunus
Posts: 5018
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by Posaunus »

[quote="Chronos91"]How did a non-brass player even get an opinion that strong on the matter?[/quote]

Band director got her music education from a school in Texas? :idk:
M
marccromme
Posts: 457
Joined: Mar 30, 2018

by marccromme »

As we say on our side of the pond: Everything is bigger in Texas. ...<EMOJI seq="1f603" tseq="1f603">😃</EMOJI>
B
BPBasso
Posts: 96
Joined: Mar 31, 2025

by BPBasso »

[quote="Bonehenge"]Of course. Where else? Selmer should take a .5G and label it the MAGATone mouthpiece.[/quote]

:lol: :lol:

That's a good one. Gunna have to steal that.
B
Bonehenge
Posts: 67
Joined: Nov 12, 2021

by Bonehenge »

[quote="marccromme"]As we say on our side of the pond: Everything is bigger in Texas. ...<EMOJI seq="1f603" tseq="1f603">😃</EMOJI>[/quote]

Including the steaming piles of verbal bullshit. Oh, and also politicized shock troops to send to states that the fuehrer doesn't like. We have those, too.
B
BEngland
Posts: 8
Joined: Mar 22, 2023

by BEngland »

Maybe you can tie the idea of playing a large mouthpiece on trombone with playing on a strong reed for a woodwind player.

What strength reeds are the beginning clarinet and saxophones starting on? Playing on a 5G as a beginner is a lot like playing on a strength 4 or 5 reed.

My two cents as a band director.
P
Posaunus
Posts: 5018
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by Posaunus »

I was quite small when I began playing the trombone in 7th grade. But (as we all did in those days) I started on a small-bore trombone; flourished, and moved to larger equipment when my body and physiology were ready for it. Worked for me and thousands of others. No way could I have done this starting on a 0.547" bore/5G mouthpiece - a recipe for failure! :horror:
B
BGuttman
Posts: 7368
Joined: Mar 22, 2018

by BGuttman »

Reminds me of the story of the Band Director who thought a 1C was a nice trumpet mouthpiece, so why wouldn't a 1G be good for the trombone section? :evil:
A
atopper333
Posts: 377
Joined: Mar 09, 2022

by atopper333 »

[quote="Posaunus"]I was quite small when I began playing the trombone in 7th grade. But (as we all did in those days) I started on a small-bore trombone; flourished, and moved to larger equipment when my body and physiology were ready for it. Worked for me and thousands of others. No way could I have done this starting on a 0.547" bore/5G mouthpiece - a recipe for failure! :horror:[/quote]

Same here! Started on a YSL-352 in the 7th grade. By 8th I was on a .525 bore Holton 602F and stayed there for awhile. I really wasn’t up to my old man’s .547 TR-158 until Junior/Senior year. It is most definitely a recipe for failure and a way to drive younger players from the horn in frustration….
T
tbdana
Posts: 1928
Joined: Apr 08, 2023

by tbdana »

[quote="Posaunus"]I was quite small when I began playing the trombone in 7th grade. But (as we all did in those days) I started on a small-bore trombone; flourished, and moved to larger equipment when my body and physiology were ready for it. Worked for me and thousands of others. No way could I have done this starting on a 0.547" bore/5G mouthpiece - a recipe for failure! :horror:[/quote]

Yeah, this. I played a King 2B with a 12C mouthpiece in 7th and 8th grade. It was appropriate to my body and muscle development.

In fact, maybe you'd get the lights to come on if you analogized it to lifting weights.

"You wouldn't start a 7th or 8th grader on heavy weights, you'd start them on light weights and let them increase the load as they mature and build strength and body infrastructure. It's the same with trombone. It's a muscle and body infrastructure thing. Trombone is far more athletic than, say, clarinet.

"Playing big equipment is like lifting big weights. It's inappropriate in kids that age, and can hurt them. You don't want to hurt them, do you, band director? You don't want angry parents coming after you, do you? Maybe you should start them on equipment more appropriate to their age. You should consult, oh, I dunno, maybe a trombone teacher?"
H
hyperbolica
Posts: 3990
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by hyperbolica »

My parents got me an 88h when I was 11. I had started on a King 602 probably a year before that. 11 was definitely too young for an 88h. It was too heavy for my wrist, too heavy to carry in a case, too big to get that big sound on

But I did eventually grow into it. Being on a too big horn didn't stunt my growth or prevent me from improving. I'm not saying the teacher is right to do this, just that it might not be the end of the world. There might be other battles more worthy of your time.
G
GabrielRice
Posts: 1496
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by GabrielRice »

I'm of two minds about this. One mind agrees with you completely.

The other mind says, "well...there are tuba players the same age, right?" Any tuba takes more air than a .547 bore trombone and any tuba mouthpiece is a whole lot bigger than a 5G. Obviously they're playing an octave lower, but it's not about size (though I can't even imagine anybody starting a beginner tuba on the monster 6/4 tubas the pros in most American orchestras play).

I have more of a problem with forcing the kids to play repertoire they're not ready for.

As an aside, I once fielded an angry phone call from the home teacher of a HS junior I had at summer camp who was overblowing a 6-1/2AL on her 88HO. There was a 5G in her case, so I suggested she play it. He told me he never let his students play anything larger than a 6-1/2AL until they could play Bolero consistently. I agreed to go with his plan, and we worked instead on controlling the pitch and tone quality on the 6-1/2AL. It worked out fine...that student recently graduated from a major music school.
G
GabrielRice
Posts: 1496
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by GabrielRice »

A suggestion: get them some kind of support device to help them hold the instruments up. I like the straps from Yamaha or Leather Specialties myself, but there are others of course. That would probably help beginners on real beginner trombones too...
S
StephenK
Posts: 171
Joined: Mar 26, 2018

by StephenK »

Getting some support sounds like a plan.

Here is one of Peter Moore aged 12 years with a Rath support.

[url]https://youtu.be/MBFWLRbkUGY?si=vhZQbY3tsPZJ5pub
M
MahlerMusic
Posts: 158
Joined: May 07, 2019

by MahlerMusic »

Air support is what I work the most on with my Daughter (Grade 9). I can't imagen trying to get her to fill my 88h. Playing the lowest notes on a trombone is doable very quickly (low E) but getting a relaxed high range takes years of work and muscle building. Why handicap a young player from day 1.

I'm sure many of us can take a King 2B and sound full and loud in a middle school band. But the mental game of having a larger instrument does come into play. I know I started playing louder and fuller when I switched to a medium bore.
T
tbdana
Posts: 1928
Joined: Apr 08, 2023

by tbdana »

When we learn to fly do we start with an F-15 fighter jet?

When we learn weightlifting do we start with a 500 kilo deadlift?

When we learn to cook do we begin with croquembouche?

When we first start running do we begin with a marathon?

When we learn to drive do we start with a tractor-trailer big rig?

When we learn math do we begin with differential calculus?

To me, it sounds as if this school band director has goals outside of his environment. He wants big sounds! Great, if you're the conductor of a professional symphony orchestra. But is that best for the small children he's teaching to play? He wants this for his own ears, because he likes to hear big sound. But if he's not the conductor of a professional symphony, if he's a school teacher of young children, perhaps his goal should be more aligned with ease of student learning than what he likes to listen to.

I've never flown anything bigger than a paper airplane. I suppose, as an adult, I could jump right to learning to fly an F-15, but is that the best way for me to learn flying? Or would that just force me to grapple with the unnecessary difficulties of piloting something that gives the instructor a woody?
E
EriKon
Posts: 636
Joined: Apr 03, 2022

by EriKon »

[quote="tbdana"]When we learn to fly do we start with an F-15 fighter jet?

When we learn weightlifting do we start with a 500 kilo deadlift?

When we learn to cook do we begin with croquembouche?

When we first start running do we begin with a marathon?

When we learn to drive do we start with a tractor-trailer big rig?

When we learn math do we begin with differential calculus?

To me, it sounds as if this school band director has goals outside of his environment. He wants big sounds! Great, if you're the conductor of a professional symphony orchestra. But is that best for the small children he's teaching to play? He wants this for his own ears, because he likes to hear big sound. But if he's not the conductor of a professional symphony, if he's a school teacher of young children, perhaps his goal should be more aligned with ease of student learning than what he likes to listen to.

I've never flown anything bigger than a paper airplane. I suppose, as an adult, I could jump right to learning to fly an F-15, but is that the best way for me to learn flying? Or would that just force me to grapple with the unnecessary difficulties of piloting something that gives the instructor a woody?[/quote]

I don't find most of these comparisons accurate. After all we're just blowing air through a tube. If it's done correctly it doesn't matter that much on what size it happens. I would still agree tho that it might be easier to start on a small horn. But not like massively.
J
JTeagarden
Posts: 625
Joined: Feb 24, 2025

by JTeagarden »

The thing I found appalling when I moved down to Texas were the number of Bach 42s used in marching bands, thoroughly trashed, of course.
P
Posaunus
Posts: 5018
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by Posaunus » (edited 2025-10-24 3:17 p.m.)

[quote="JTeagarden"]The thing I found appalling when I moved down to Texas were the number of Bach 42s used in marching bands, thoroughly trashed, of course.[/quote]

Ten-gallon hats and ten-gallon trombones. Everthin's bigger in Texas! :amazed:
B
Bonehenge
Posts: 67
Joined: Nov 12, 2021

by Bonehenge » (edited 2025-10-24 3:52 p.m.)

[quote="JTeagarden"]The thing I found appalling when I moved down to Texas were the number of Bach 42s used in marching bands, thoroughly trashed, of course.[/quote]
J
JTeagarden
Posts: 625
Joined: Feb 24, 2025

by JTeagarden »

[quote="Bonehenge"]My Dad forced me to play the trombone, gave me a King Cleveland which I loved, then confiscated it in a fit of anger which he still won't explain.[/quote]

I think giving you a Cleveland to play is now considered a form of child abuse.
B
Bonehenge
Posts: 67
Joined: Nov 12, 2021

by Bonehenge »

[quote="tbdana"]When we learn to fly do we start with an F-15 fighter jet?

When we learn weightlifting do we start with a 500 kilo deadlift?

When we learn to cook do we begin with croquembouche?

When we first start running do we begin with a marathon?

When we learn to drive do we start with a tractor-trailer big rig?

When we learn math do we begin with differential calculus?[/quote]

Spot on. I've thought about asking her to spread her educational theories to the coaches to make 12 year olds weight train as adults with adult weights. They should also be wearing pads and helmets for high schoolers. I'm trying to indiscreetly find out what strength of reed clarinets and saxes are started on per the recs here.
B
Bonehenge
Posts: 67
Joined: Nov 12, 2021

by Bonehenge »

[quote="JTeagarden"]<QUOTE author="Bonehenge" post_id="287853" time="1761332151" user_id="13659">
My Dad forced me to play the trombone, gave me a King Cleveland which I loved, then confiscated it in a fit of anger which he still won't explain.[/quote]

I think giving you a Cleveland to play is now considered a form of child abuse.
</QUOTE>

Whatever. I think telling a kid that an instrument belonged to him then taking it away is child abuse.
J
JohnL
Posts: 2529
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by JohnL »

[quote="Bonehenge"]My Dad forced me to play the trombone, gave me a King Cleveland which I loved, then confiscated it in a fit of anger which he still won't explain. He's a retired band director.[/quote]

Did he ever give it back? If not, what did you play in its place?