@Trumpetb said in 1970 Bach 43 elusive high G#:
Make ROWUKs words your bible. This last post by him is gospel if ever there was a trumpet gospel.
Yes to "What is appropriate is whatever works"
Yes to " My goal is not a six-pack in our face and an industrial level compressor with the lungs"
These are the golden nuggets that we should use as a foundation to our beliefs.
Add to that others great advice such as "All we have is our sound" always always always work on your tone make it the most beautiful humanly possible by using ROWUKS words "What is appropriate is whatever works"
Read every other post of ROWUK the man knows what he is talking about.
I have reached many of the same conclusions as he states in here but it has taken me a very long time to reach that position.
Read absorb digest his words and become all the better as a performer for the doing of that.
Thanks for the flowers, but I stand on the shoulders of giants. Nothing I post is originally mine. It is all part of Arban, Irons, Stamp, Schlossberg, St. Jacome, Clarke and many others as well as practicing things like meditation, yoga and Feldenkrais.
I firmly believe that every person has a "different" entry point and finding that is my #1 priority when starting a student. Building vocabulary is the #2 step. Learning what I mean by integration is the critical part. As babies, we do all of the basics of posture, motion and breathing naturally. Once we start going to school, we start to lose these abilities and "break" our bodies in small steps. By the time we get to high school, we slouch, have back and neck tension as well as many other symptoms of our "bad behavior". Some people start to excercise, get therapy, turn vegan in hopes that things will get better. They seldom do because the "core evil" is not the symptom of pain or decreased ability to move, it is a learned reduction in integration of mind and body. That in turn leads to many pathological things.
In my view, when we are looking for a solution to something, we must identify the "root evil". As everybody with upper back pain has learned, treating the pain by massage or medicine is at best a very temporary reduction. Getting the coordination of the skeleton, muscles and mind back would be the best solution, but what specialist can you go to that offers that type of integration? In traditional medicine, there are basically none and Yoga as it is most commonly practiced, is a sports activity not a holistic thing. Many of the best other possibilities are considered too esoteric and therefore, we are all stuck with whatever ails us.
My approach to teaching trumpet is by integration. We need to leverage at the most basic level to be able to build good habits. Neck tension could kill a lesson on double or triple tonguing. Emotional tension severely limits our ability to turn airflow into music.
We are creatures of habit and our development is based on a system of rewards. That is why I say what works is the first definition of appropriate. Accomplishment->Satisfaction->Desire to repeat. This is how embouchure pressure develops. In our early developmental stages, pressure works and encourages further similar behavior. Replacing that with something that in the end MAY be better, is difficult because when trying to change habits, we have many things competing in our brains. Many times we only have lessons in the part of the year where we are performing. That means that we need to focus on what works, we have no time for addressing deeper issues that get worse before they get better!
So, if there were any words that I think would be most helpful, they are not for the physical level, they would deal with the mind and leveraging our reward system. If a high G# is hard, then do not keep trying to "hit it". Leave it alone for 4 weeks and build supportive habits (integration breath and embouchure) that ultimately could uncap blockage for an octave more than that. That is not 3 posts and an online 30 minute lesson.