Rashawn Ross: The Secret To Efficient Trumpet Playing

Is there a secret to playing the trumpet efficiently?
In this highlight clip from Episode 88 of The Trumpet Gurus Hang, the phenomenal Rashawn Ross talks about his recent introduction to the Stevens-Costello method courtesy of Gerardo Rodriguez and Larry Meregillano. Rashawn shares how it has both validated his approach to playing in the extreme upper register and provided him new insights on ways to make his playing more efficient.
If you dig this discussion make sure you catch the entire episode for more insights into the man and the musician.
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Find out more about Larry Meregillano's Compression Training System at www.trumpetlegacy.com/
Sound like a million bucks without breaking the bank with Barkley Microphones: barkleymic.com/
Let Vennture Mouthpieces help you on your search for the perfect mouthpiece. Use the code "TRUMPETGURUS21" to get 10% off your purchase: www.vennture.mp/
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Let Jose help you master your mental game: bit.ly/MindfulnessSecrets

Пікірлер: 50

  • @ThirdValve
    @ThirdValve2 жыл бұрын

    Love Rashawn's comments and vibe in this interview. Great communicator!

  • @liljohnreplogle
    @liljohnreplogle2 жыл бұрын

    Love this and love Reinhardt too 😎 thank you for posting this!! 🏆⭐️😎🎺❤️

  • @music-collective
    @music-collective Жыл бұрын

    awesome podcast. I learned a lot... thx

  • @NeoManoscaMusic
    @NeoManoscaMusic2 жыл бұрын

    Super helpful information thank you so much Jose!

  • @TheTrumpetGurusHangPodcast

    @TheTrumpetGurusHangPodcast

    2 жыл бұрын

    Glad it was helpful!

  • @oldbrassman2157
    @oldbrassman2157 Жыл бұрын

    Geat video. Really appreciated the reference to Gerado Rodriguez. I got back into studying the trumpet again about 6 years ago... after six decades! Starting to sound a bit better, but still a long way to go. I'll tell you one thing I've learned, I'm never putting the horn away again for anything more than a few hours. And I'm at least doing my "basics"; Caruso, lip flexibility exercises, note bending, etc. every day. Thanks for posting.

  • @hightpt
    @hightpt12 күн бұрын

    Check out "A New Approach to Altissimo Trumpet Playing" by John H. Lynch It's from the 1980's but I think it's still in publication and it helped me reach a double C and beyond. I love it because he's a physicist that worked for NASA and was also a trumpet player looking to play high notes. It's mostly text about the embouchure and some about the equipment, there's also some exercises in the high range. I'm 61 and still playing lead above the doubles. It worked for me.

  • @johnwilder8517
    @johnwilder851711 ай бұрын

    Heard Ross on some award show this past year and he was playing some lick above the staff over and over and over for like forever. Amazing player. jw

  • @idleviewer2010
    @idleviewer20102 жыл бұрын

    Thank you

  • @briantaylor5676
    @briantaylor56762 жыл бұрын

    I really enjoyed your comments Rashawn. Very encouraging. What mouthpiece do you play on ? Is it a narrow rim or medium wide,? Just curious

  • @ElaGibbor
    @ElaGibbor Жыл бұрын

    this channel is so good! top quality content, but could activate subtitles in portuguese and spanish....

  • @TheTrumpetGurusHangPodcast

    @TheTrumpetGurusHangPodcast

    Жыл бұрын

    Thank you for the suggestion. I will certainly look into that!

  • @blunziswing
    @blunziswing2 жыл бұрын

    What book and videos is Rashawn talking at 8:20 /8:33 ??? (Names please, thank you) Cheers from Liechtenstein (Europe)

  • @NicWeaverMusic

    @NicWeaverMusic

    2 жыл бұрын

    Embouchure Self-Analysis, The Stevens-Costello Embouchure Technique (Complete)

  • @alfonsobenitez8574
    @alfonsobenitez85742 ай бұрын

    What book is he talking about?

  • @abrogard142
    @abrogard142 Жыл бұрын

    I reckon it is like whistling. Some guys can, some guys can't. Except there's some radically different ways of whistling whereas the brass thing seems much more limited. But I reckon just like whistling those who can don't really know how come they can. They can tell you what they remember about how they got there. They can try and describe to you what they're doing when they're doing it. But they know bugger all about how other guys got there or what they're doing and even less about what's going to work for you... For me I suspect a big 'secret' is that it is found by delicacy, not by force. I say 'secret' because I've never ever seen it said: be delicate. Though I've seen some come close. This is the best I've found yet: kzread.info/dash/bejne/fY2Bk8dukca7gaQ.html

  • @metaphor5533
    @metaphor5533 Жыл бұрын

    Hello Big Boss Bop Sapp. We miss you

  • @tonysurrency4756
    @tonysurrency4756 Жыл бұрын

    Check out Doc Reinhardt compression studies. Play high c d e d c slurred soft thin asthmatic, rest them c d e f g f e d c same. Then arpeggio c e g e c. Slurred chromatic low c down to f# back up tp low c. These exercises are for response. Doc “ the squeaker today is a note of tomorrow. Look on line for his encyclopedia of brass cupped instruments for background.

  • @rockyfurlan
    @rockyfurlan Жыл бұрын

    Who is this Larry that he mentions couple of times?

  • @TheTrumpetGurusHangPodcast

    @TheTrumpetGurusHangPodcast

    Жыл бұрын

    He's referring to Larry Meregillano. Check out Episode 82 if you want to learn more about Larry.

  • @KnzoVortex
    @KnzoVortex Жыл бұрын

    4:55

  • @rnordquest
    @rnordquest Жыл бұрын

    There are like 5 major methods. Only one is likely to work for your combination of lips, teeth, tongue. Each one you try will take a few years to perfect.

  • @artvandelay8090
    @artvandelay8090 Жыл бұрын

    Saying "how you use the air" is still giving too much credit to the air and the breathing apparatus. Efficiency happens as a result of how the embouchure functions. Everyone from a 7th-grade student, on up to an 80-year old person has enough air power to play double-Cs. What separates those who can from those who can't is the embouchure. This podcast confirms that. All these teachers - some of them who are respected and renowned - who say that "Oh, it's all in the air, it's all about your breathing," they're just flat-out wrong. Maynard Ferguson didn't help matters by sending people down a rabbit hole with all of his bluster about Yoga breathing techniques and all of that nonsense. Maynard didn't know why he could do what he did, and if you watch Denis DeBlasio's podcast about "the high-note book" it confirms this first hand. And a lot of these respected teachers who preach about air, they are great players, but a lot of what they do with their embouchures happens so unconsciously, they don't know what's going on, so they're left to theorize and they end up theorizing incorrectly that air is more important than it is. What Rashawn is saying is absolutely correct and I'm glad that he had the courage to point it out in spite of the fact that it goes against what is preached by a lot of the conventional trumpet wisdom.

  • @elsonharewood7933

    @elsonharewood7933

    Жыл бұрын

    I understand and support your point. I started playing the trumpet in 1973 and stopped around 76/77 and started again around 83 and played until 87/88. I started again in 94 and played for about three years under a tutor for about two of those. I started again in 2018/9 under a tutor, this time trying to focus on technique. No one ever told me anything about embrochure or aperture and placement of the mouthpiece. I was reaching C, two lines u above the stave and playing two octaves up and down in one breath, playing to the right of the centre of my lips. When my lips got tired it was difficult to control my aperture. I read Charlie Davis on KZread and tried to follow his tips on mouthpiece placement and discover that my teeth didn't allow for the ideal aperture but I could attain high notes, even high C at times but using muscles I wasn't using previously, but lost the control I previously had. I'm now working to improve my embrochure by lining up my bottom lip and teeth as recommended. After recovering from COVID I'm not holding breath for 30 crotchets as before and have to take a breath near the top of the second octave, sometimes on the up, sometimes on the down, and near the bottom of the lower octave coming down. I guess that will improve with time. It seems so much easier with Charlie's method that can't believe that, or understand why, I wasn't told of this before. I find these KZread sessions are invaluable and intend to use them as supplementaries in the future.

  • @artvandelay8090

    @artvandelay8090

    Жыл бұрын

    @@elsonharewood7933 There are a lot of cases like yours. But what people also don't tell you (mostly because they are unaware of it themselves) is that teeth contours have EVERYTHING to do with it. To give you and oversimplified hint of what I'm talking about, crooked teeth make high notes easy. Perfectly straight and perfectly spaced teeth make them difficult. The bite also has a lot to do with it. Even bites or underbites are a big advantage. Overbites and more challenging. Not impossible but challenging. Upper front teeth that angle inward are the most challenging. Every kid who has had braces on their teeth after they started playing the trumpet always says that the high notes were much easier before the braces than after.

  • @general5104

    @general5104

    Жыл бұрын

    I've been trying to pump out a scale, for almost a year. To see kids playing, flawlessly, and I'm an old man and cant do a scale...man! but its building my lungs back up from COVID & Pneumonia & a TIA. Thanks for your views!

  • @elsonharewood7933

    @elsonharewood7933

    Жыл бұрын

    The name Bryan Davis of "Airflow" fame

  • @elsonharewood7933

    @elsonharewood7933

    Жыл бұрын

    @@general5104 Try deep breathing, holding your breath for long periods, and exhaling slowly. This will help in your phrasing. I tried counting to 60 and started exhaling at 40, most phrases would be less than a minute so that as a guide would help. You could also try walking and do some deep breathing while walking. I'm also looking at circular breathing which is breathing through the nose while playing.

  • @darryljones9208
    @darryljones92082 жыл бұрын

    Air pressure is not created in the oral cavity. It is by the exhalation effort.

  • @kireduk2217

    @kireduk2217

    2 жыл бұрын

    Air pressure is created by the resistance of the exhalation, which can be provided by the oral cavity.

  • @darryljones9208

    @darryljones9208

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@kireduk2217 the oral cavity does not create air pressure. When playing a tone, the primary resistance is the instrument , the secondary resistance is the lip aperture, the resistance of the oral space is negligible compared to those. Narrowing the oral space to the point of creating a significant resistance will reduce the air pressure bearing on the aperture.

  • @kireduk2217

    @kireduk2217

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@darryljones9208 in that respect, a typical straw and a coffee stirrer would have the same blow and the miniscule measurements between mpc throat, backbore, and tpt leadpipe sizes would be negligible. Releasing a breath of air is significantly less resisted by an "aw" than a "sss". You can add at both ends of the equation. I'm not saying you're wrong that exhalation effort isn't a factor. It is not, however, the only variable that determines pressure.

  • @darryljones9208

    @darryljones9208

    2 жыл бұрын

    Resistance is not pressure, nor does it determine the pressure. It DOES determine the resulting flow for a particular pressure.

  • @newunderthesun7353

    @newunderthesun7353

    2 жыл бұрын

    Exhaling without an oral cavity = wind blowing freely. Hold your trumpet up to the air without an oral cavity and listen to the sound it makes.

  • @awreckingball
    @awreckingball2 жыл бұрын

    Who's being interviewed here? Let the guest speak.

  • @thomasbarreca6305

    @thomasbarreca6305

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes! Jose talks too much. Ask a simple question, and then let Rashawn talk.

  • @nathanbohr9103

    @nathanbohr9103

    Жыл бұрын

    @@thomasbarreca6305 it’s a conversation not an interview

  • @barryhunt8527
    @barryhunt8527 Жыл бұрын

    Too much talk on these vids saying a lot of nothing. All these comments saying how good this is but they’ve actually not told anybody how to do anything. Ends up saying I just figured it out for myself. Ok thanks for nothing and wasting my time listening to that rubbish

  • @DillonM-mc6yw

    @DillonM-mc6yw

    Жыл бұрын

    Then quit complaining and go practice.

  • @barryhunt8527

    @barryhunt8527

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DillonM-mc6yw I do smartass 🖕

  • @johnwilder8517

    @johnwilder8517

    10 ай бұрын

    ​@@DillonM-mc6yw are you who I think you are? jw

  • @DillonM-mc6yw

    @DillonM-mc6yw

    10 ай бұрын

    @@johnwilder8517 I’m going to assume not, John. Who knows, though? Maybe

  • @alfonsobenitez8574

    @alfonsobenitez8574

    2 ай бұрын

    I agreed.

  • @explodingsausage6576
    @explodingsausage65763 ай бұрын

    The Stevens-Costello is utter garbage that has ruined thousands of players over the years. Roy Stevens was a con artist who used to take a broken player, make them play with an upstream embouchure and pinch and squeeze until the faintest hint of a double C came out, then used that to sucker them into paying him a lot of money for lessons for years and years.