Your Daily Routine
We all have different daily routines ā some are more structured, while others just pick up the horn and go! What is your approach? Is there something youāre currently struggling with in regards to your daily routine? Share what youāve learned about daily routine, and ask any questions you might have from others. Letās help inspire the tonebase Trumpet family!
10 replies
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I used to follow a basic warm up sheet my directors would give me with a bit of Arbans method afterwards. Worked pretty good but the only thing I struggled with was always high register exercises.
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Honestly, the thing I struggle with the most is maintaining motivation. Iāve been playing off and on for almost four years now but if I were to add up all the time that Iāve been actively working on improving, itās probably more like two years.
Iāll learn a song, or find a fun workout, learn it, play it for a couple weeks and then life happens and I forget to keep it up for a month or two. When I go back to the trumpet, all of the work I put in is mostly gone and I have to start all over again, which is doubly de-motivating.
How does everyone keep themselves motivated to keep playing and pushing? Especially if youāre not in school or otherwise surrounded by people doing the same thing? Learning on your own is tough š©
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Since I started the trumpet back up, I have been using Charles S. Peters "Total Range." For those that have no experience with it, this method is designed to be your first practice session providing some long tone, lip slurs, and chromatics (ala Clarke 1). Intent is to work range but it states it includes the warm-up. Although listed as "Week 1" "Week 2" etc. each lesson is not really a week and you move on when ready. Then it calls for at least an hour rest before spending time on other things like scales, etudes, and music prep.
For my second practice session I spend about a half hour sight-transposing Arban's lyrical studies to C trumpet. Then I am working on Clark 4 for another half hour or so. Goal is not time but quality. But I do end up with about an hour forty five minutes of practice.
Going back to "Total Range" whereas in the past, I would just play through the exercises, I am trying to better apply techniques I learned in some of the videos here on tonebase like Ryan Dark's "Troubleshooting" and Allen Vizzutti's "Efficiency in Practice" with some success. However, I am starting to question the efficacy of "Total Range" wondering whether it moves past the warm up too quickly and has some larger jumps in level than I am prepared for when going to the next week. Has anyone had any experience with "Total Range"?