Mutes, the bane of my life. Most of my playing is in theatre pit bands. I’ve probably spent more money on mutes for shows than I’ve been paid. Hat mute, Cleartone, metal and fibre straight mutes, metal and fibre cups, plunger, felt mute, even an extra Harmon because there wasn’t enough time to remove and replace stem between use. Sometimes I feel more like a juggler than a trumpet player. Why those that write scores don’t understand the player’s time requirements is a mystery. The puzzled face of an MD when you ask "Do you want this passage with a cup, or straight? Because you can’t have both. I physically cannot change mutes on a quaver rest".
Rapier232
@Rapier232
Retired. Amateur trumpet, cornet and Flugel player. (Although I do get paid to play in theatre shows).
Best posts made by Rapier232
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RE: Mute Musings
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RE: Increase high range by 4 notes in 6 weeks?
Update. While I’m still convinced I won’t gain the G in time to be able to play it well enough, or reliably enough, to perform it in the show, I am making more progress than I expected. I can, at least, hit it occasionally. Something I couldn’t do at all when I made the original post. And when I do get it, it’s a real note that I can hold for 8 or more beats, not just a weak squeak. There’s hope for this old man yet.
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RE: Happy 4th of July!
Yes, Happy Independence Day, or as we call it in the UK, Saturday.
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RE: need perfect pitch to play trombone ?
@moshe
Doubt it. Perfect pitch is quite rare. Some university did a study recently and found it’s something like only 1 in 10,000.
They also compared musicians and non musicians and found no difference in ability to recognise pitch.Trombone players are just like us trumpet players, only not as cool, obviously. Practice teaches us when a note is in tune.
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RE: Turning Guns into Trumpets
@SSmith1226
I appreciate all of that, but my point still stands. Having been a Cop for 30 years I’ve seen a lot of good ideas go wrong, because they haven’t been thought through properly. I hope his scheme works out, but bad people do bad things to good people every day. -
RE: Hello! Welcome to TB, who are you?
Hello. I’m Dave and I’m an alcoholic. Damn , wrong forum.
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RE: Notre-Dame de Paris
York Minster, in the UK was gutted by fire, as was Windsor Castle. We rebuilt both. The craftsman are still in existence to effect such skilled work.
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RE: Hello! Welcome to TB, who are you?
I suppose I should do a serious one.
I’m Dave. Married for 46 years, two sons. The youngest is now an American! Although in his defence, he said he had his fingers crossed while taking the oath, so it doesn’t really count. And anyway he took an oath to Her Majesty the Queen as an Army Officer and a Queen outranks a President. He moved to Texas at Christmas, have yet to visit there. Covid has stopped our yearly visit. The other son is a Firefighter. I was a cop in London for 30 years, in various roles. Beat cop. Mounted Branch for 4 years. Back to beat and then into Firearms. Was what you call SWAT, as an operator and Instructor for 18years. A policy decision meant you could only specialise for 5 years, so had to move on. I moved to Royalty Protection, where I was a Bodyguard to the Royal Family. Stayed there until my 30 years was served, so retired.
Never had any musical interest, other than being a rock drummer in my teens. In my 30’s I bought a trumpet and Tune a Day book 1. I then taught myself to play and read music. Badly! I gave up several times over the years and eventually went along to a brass band. Turned out my self teaching wasn’t very good. The book said press 1 & 2 and that was an A. Turns out my A was an E, oops. Anyway gradually improved on cornet, eventually moved to tenor horn. After several years I gave up altogether. After retiring and moving to the country my wife insisted I found a hobby of some sort. I joined a local brass band, on tenor horn. Got promoted quite quickly to solo horn. After a few years I decided I didn’t really like brass band music, so left and bought a trumpet. Still have no idea what the scales are called, just look at the key and play accordingly. Played in a concert band and an orchestra, now I get to play in a local theatre in the pit band for musicals and Pantomimes. Still haven’t had a single music lesson. Can’t play without sheet music. Might retire again soon, losing interest with nothing to practice for.
Latest posts made by Rapier232
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RE: New Toy (not a trumpet)
I’ve owned it for around 35 years now. Only 78000 miles and average mileage a year now is 150 miles or less. Never comes out the garage if raining, going to rain or has rained recently.
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RE: To Reduce Covid-19 Risks in Orchestras, Move Wind Instruments to the Sidelines
Which goes against what the research in the UK shows. Brass and woodwind emit fewer than speaking does.
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RE: Traits that make a great sight reader?
@mike-ansberry
I can see the note, hear the note, play the note. But only on the trumpet, I can not sing the part. ️ -
RE: On Line Theory
@kehaulani said in On Line Theory:
Introducing Mr. Arban, Rapier,
(You can download copies for free. Just google.)I’ve owned an Arban for 35 years or more. Not the theory I’m looking for.
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RE: On Line Theory
Yes. My problem was I started playing in a Brass Band. I gradually learned what key signatures were, but was never required to know the names of the scales. Just what notes to # or b. So all my playing is just from sheet music, with no theory knowledge whatsoever. I get by, but would like a bit more knowledge.