Got any summer practice goals?
It is officially summertime, and while many of us are eager to go on vacation, some of use might want to use the extra hours of daylight to practice more! Are there any techniques, pieces, etudes, or concepts you’d really like to work on to structure your summer practice? What progress would you like to make on them? (And is there any tonebase material that might help you along that journey?) Let us know below!
6 replies
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I'm working on the Guided Improv course but am a little behind. It has re-awakened my memorizing skills, though, and I am committed to catching up and mastering the material as well as the entire course on jazz theory. For me, Tonebase is a really great experience.
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I took the summer off from my community band, and so I'm working instead on:
- Claude Gordon Daily Routines trying to build my endurance. I'm hitting this hard over the summer since I have no real playing commitments to work towards, but would love to be able to hold an A in concert at the end of the concert when I'm already exhausted come fall without my chops just giving up on me. A C would be great, but I'll settle for a reliable A.
- Trios with my kids - me on either trumpet or baritone, my son on trumpet, and my daughter on french horn. We're working on How to Train Your Dragon, The Avengers, and a trumpet duet arrangement of Blue Bossa.
- Trying to learn Nightsongs on flugel
- Trying to re-learn improv on my trumpet (via the Guided Improv course to start with).
- There's an audition coming up in a month to be one of the featured players for Bugler's Holiday for the fall concert that I've been working through. Surprisingly I'm finding the double tonguing doable as long as I'm sufficiently warmed up, but falling short on the bugle call at the end where I can't single tongue fast enough, nor can I triple tongue with any synchronization between my fingers and embouchure. The director tells me they typically play it slowed down to 144, and at that speed I think if I work just a little harder I'll be able to just single tongue it. I can reliably single tongue sixteenth notes at 88 right now, and just need to get that up to 108 to do the triplets at 144. I'm following the "play for 1 minute straight at your fastest comfortable speed every day, and increase by one step every week" method. Just needs a lot more practice is all. And time. Anyone found that infinite time glitch yet?
- Finally I just replaced my trusty Yamaha 6345 that I've been playing since 1993 with a used customized Bach Commercial, and I've been working through the growing pains of getting used to a new instrument for the first time in 30 years.
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I'm on a maintenance plan myself! I have a few gigs later in the summer, and am just trying to make 30-45 minutes a day to keep everything in good shape. The warm-up routine I use is inspired by what Dan Rosenboom does (stay tuned for his course in a few weeks) but it varies a lot day-to-day. I try to mix in a wide array of technical fundamentals, with a lot of bends and articulation work. Usually this is sufficient for the majority of playing situations I find myself in. When I have time to work in more targeted ways, I tend to pick concepts and work on free improvisation. This always translates into playing over tunes, etc.