Check your email.. Im interesting in your mpc..i havr a couple questions..
@haraldspreng8 ай бұрын
Hallo, what is to do, if the reed to strong .Thanks
@2005rosebud Жыл бұрын
how do I buy this book. Very interesting
@saldrich3226 Жыл бұрын
Good stuff to think about.
@saldrich3226 Жыл бұрын
Might as well turn off ads on these videos. You need to have 100k-1m views to make any money. A niche market like sax instruction won’t make any money. The commercials are a constant annoyance. Sorry to be a negative Nancy, but that’s the reality here.
@saldrich3226 Жыл бұрын
I wouldn’t use electrical tape. The plastic and adhesive is no way food-grade. Other than that, this video is gold.
@saldrich3226 Жыл бұрын
Very informative! Just like another video I commented on, the audio level could be higher so that the commercials aren’t blaring.
@saldrich3226 Жыл бұрын
Love this series! One small suggestion. Raise the audio level quite a bit. You have to crank the volume to max to hear it. When a commercial comes on, it’s painfully loud. Thanks!
@Wolverine3660 Жыл бұрын
Chris was my first sax teacher while I was a undergrad at Univ of Michigan!!!!
@joellemorris5684 Жыл бұрын
For clarinet: do you think that a Vandoren reed trimmer could work for a D'addario reed? Thanks for this great video!! I found the PDF you talked about: makingmusicmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/Web-Content-REEDS-BOOK-8.5-x-5.5-2-FINAL1.pdf
@ericmalone32132 жыл бұрын
This is great Geoff. Your students are very fortunate.
@andref34192 жыл бұрын
Embouchure pressure instead of air support… This is what I see, realize, hear, see very often. And then, sometimes there are very young students, pupils out there, being able to modulate the sound very easily, also in a quite low register without any effort, while regardless having the same teacher = me 😊🤣 ! So it also may be due to individual talent, or/and it depends on passion for finding the “truth”, and so finally to result in ambitious work ?! Difficult to judge. Good and interesting video on classical saxophone issues. Thank you 👍 !
@ruez2kill2 жыл бұрын
Very good talk, lotsa useful and helpful hints, thank you.
@Shooshie1282 жыл бұрын
I enjoyed your discussion very much. I was a saxophonist who took an odd path, kind of learning in spite of myself and in spite of the great teachers around me who I didn’t really relate to for some reason. But I heard classical music in my ear, and I began transcribing all kinds of pieces. Composers like Villa Lobos, Ginastera, Poulenc (oboe sonata), Franck (flute sonata), Prokofiev flute sonata, Rachmaninov, Debussy songs, Faure, Wolff, Bach (violin Partitas & sonatas), and many other composers. I just lived in their world, somehow, and that’s what I did on the soprano sax. But I did it at a time when nobody else was doing that. (1970s, 1980s) I never got a feeling of acceptance from sax players over that. A couple sax players told me I was playing so far above their level that they couldn’t relate. I never felt good enough, though. The flute professor at University of Texas heard my tape of the Prokofiev and told the student he was with (a friend of mine) that he had never heard a better recording of it. I think he was being kind. It’s hard to pull off on the sax, and I never got it to where it belonged, though it probably sounds impressive if you haven’t played it. Anyway, I went other directions after that. All involved music performance and production, but more from a director point of view. Now I’m just playing the piano, and I love it very much. But Listening to you guys talking brings back so many memories. You mention a lot of people who were my peers and/or friends. But I was especially interested in the stuff you ended with: the transcriptions. I think saxophone needs that so much, if not as core repertoire, at least as a means for learning from the great masters. Play the Prokofiev and pick your virtuoso. Pick 3. Pick 10. That will change how you hear and play music. When someone like Itzhak Perlman dazzles you with the Prokofiev, you hear what’s possible. That kicks your awareness level up a bunch of levels at once. Suddenly you hear how badly you’ve been approaching music, but now that you have “permission,” you hear your own voice and you can interpret composers. [I should speak in 1st person: I heard how badly I’d been approaching music. Maybe you guys are already there.] The experience made a real musician of me. I wish I could have stayed with it and performed widely, but after a few years of performing a lot, I had to quit and make a living. Thus, the performing arts management jobs, directorial jobs, audio engineering jobs, MIDI jobs, and digital performance... the list goes on. I wore a lot of hats, but I put my kids through college, including Yale!] Now I’ve retired from all that stuff. I play piano from 4 to 6 hours a day, and immersing myself in literally the world’s greatest composers is like heaven on earth. I spend a lot of time with Sebastian Bach. So amazing. French Suites, English Suites, the Preludes... (my remaining life is too short to tackle all the fugues!) But it takes me back to what I was doing on the sax - I wanted to know what those composers knew. I wanted to interpret their works, feel their music, know their musicality. And saxophone will do that, but it’s the hardest thing I ever did in my life. Physically demanding... (try Villa-Lobos’s BB#5 Aria on soprano modeling your breath after Victoria de Los Angeles, slowly... it’s like running a mile. The Prokofiev Sonata is more like a marathon!) but this instrument that you can play wrong but it works anyway, becomes very stubborn and cumbersome when trying to perform violin and flute acrobatics. Even Bach’s V.Partitas & Sonatas are incredibly demanding. The thing that made it possible for me was the mouthpiece exercise. I trace nearly all my technical breakthroughs to that one exercise, combined of course with all the exercises I would do anyway. But that one was the key that opened up all the others. I’ve written too much. Sorry... but not a lot of traffic here. Maybe you’ll see it. Maybe not. But my best to both of you, and I’m so glad to see the incredible improvement in sax playing and pedagogy over the last 40 years. I wish I could have been a part of it, but really I think I had a great musical career doing “other things.” Sax served its purpose for me, and I still have a quartet of old Mark VIs that I play now and then. And I did play a small roll somewhere by writing the original core of the SaxFAQ, including the mouthpiece exercise. I wrote a lot of it, but not some of the other stuff attributed to me. I got letters from all over the world for years - over a thousand - thanking me for “changing their lives,” and it felt good to be able to share that. But I probably wouldn’t go back. I’m too old for that kind of workout again. Like doing ballet while holding your breath for 30 minutes. And Piano has me right where I want to be. But power to you both! You’re doing a great job! Truly.
@Just4Sax2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for sharing your researches. 😊 🎷 All the best, Lucia from Just4Sax
@leechenli19873 жыл бұрын
I feel lucky to listen n enjoy your sax music. thank you
@jasonmingledorff47063 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much! I would love to hear you all playing in person with an orchestra. Love the comment on feeling the time. I remember the first rehearsal I did of Pictures and thinking that I had played the solo nicely, but was mortified when the conductor asked me if I could hear the cellos because I wasn’t with them. It was a totally different way for me of conceptualizing the time. Also appreciate the discussion of having to sit for a long while before playing. I remember stressing out for weeks about that first entrance in the Prokofiev. Every day I would pick up the horn cold and try to play that first solo entrance. It was so hard, but what a wonderful experience. Do you have a favorite excerpt? Do you have a most terrifying one?
@jakebickham1233 жыл бұрын
thank you so much for this resource. Very very interesting stuff!
@AnonymousBN3 жыл бұрын
so many gems in here. thanks for posting
@juan15car3 жыл бұрын
Very Nice video
@DJSTOEK3 жыл бұрын
💘
@ryanmarkwart71193 жыл бұрын
Fantastic!
@ms.atuyahtheviolinist40583 жыл бұрын
Do you accept private lessons
@jeffreyjfleung3 жыл бұрын
My apologies for the strange PowerPoint view... I promise it was full-screen on my end! Thanks to Dr. Nabb for the opportunity to speak on this great platform/resource for the saxophone community! I'm happy to answer follow up questions :)
@davidbakersaxophone78973 жыл бұрын
Great info Diane!
@gaberobles43503 жыл бұрын
Great chat to listen to! 🎷
@billdance37103 жыл бұрын
Hahaha saxophone go brrr
@stanvans32143 жыл бұрын
Teaching always keeping the tongue high in the back of the oral cavity would result in a relatively limited tonal spectrum, no?
@therealappl33 жыл бұрын
interesting
@beast64283 жыл бұрын
So who’s your favorite doctor 🤔
@sushilsharma55773 жыл бұрын
Good one..was looking for erricson and got here..very useful
Пікірлер
Check your email.. Im interesting in your mpc..i havr a couple questions..
Hallo, what is to do, if the reed to strong .Thanks
how do I buy this book. Very interesting
Good stuff to think about.
Might as well turn off ads on these videos. You need to have 100k-1m views to make any money. A niche market like sax instruction won’t make any money. The commercials are a constant annoyance. Sorry to be a negative Nancy, but that’s the reality here.
I wouldn’t use electrical tape. The plastic and adhesive is no way food-grade. Other than that, this video is gold.
Very informative! Just like another video I commented on, the audio level could be higher so that the commercials aren’t blaring.
Love this series! One small suggestion. Raise the audio level quite a bit. You have to crank the volume to max to hear it. When a commercial comes on, it’s painfully loud. Thanks!
Chris was my first sax teacher while I was a undergrad at Univ of Michigan!!!!
For clarinet: do you think that a Vandoren reed trimmer could work for a D'addario reed? Thanks for this great video!! I found the PDF you talked about: makingmusicmag.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/Web-Content-REEDS-BOOK-8.5-x-5.5-2-FINAL1.pdf
This is great Geoff. Your students are very fortunate.
Embouchure pressure instead of air support… This is what I see, realize, hear, see very often. And then, sometimes there are very young students, pupils out there, being able to modulate the sound very easily, also in a quite low register without any effort, while regardless having the same teacher = me 😊🤣 ! So it also may be due to individual talent, or/and it depends on passion for finding the “truth”, and so finally to result in ambitious work ?! Difficult to judge. Good and interesting video on classical saxophone issues. Thank you 👍 !
Very good talk, lotsa useful and helpful hints, thank you.
I enjoyed your discussion very much. I was a saxophonist who took an odd path, kind of learning in spite of myself and in spite of the great teachers around me who I didn’t really relate to for some reason. But I heard classical music in my ear, and I began transcribing all kinds of pieces. Composers like Villa Lobos, Ginastera, Poulenc (oboe sonata), Franck (flute sonata), Prokofiev flute sonata, Rachmaninov, Debussy songs, Faure, Wolff, Bach (violin Partitas & sonatas), and many other composers. I just lived in their world, somehow, and that’s what I did on the soprano sax. But I did it at a time when nobody else was doing that. (1970s, 1980s) I never got a feeling of acceptance from sax players over that. A couple sax players told me I was playing so far above their level that they couldn’t relate. I never felt good enough, though. The flute professor at University of Texas heard my tape of the Prokofiev and told the student he was with (a friend of mine) that he had never heard a better recording of it. I think he was being kind. It’s hard to pull off on the sax, and I never got it to where it belonged, though it probably sounds impressive if you haven’t played it. Anyway, I went other directions after that. All involved music performance and production, but more from a director point of view. Now I’m just playing the piano, and I love it very much. But Listening to you guys talking brings back so many memories. You mention a lot of people who were my peers and/or friends. But I was especially interested in the stuff you ended with: the transcriptions. I think saxophone needs that so much, if not as core repertoire, at least as a means for learning from the great masters. Play the Prokofiev and pick your virtuoso. Pick 3. Pick 10. That will change how you hear and play music. When someone like Itzhak Perlman dazzles you with the Prokofiev, you hear what’s possible. That kicks your awareness level up a bunch of levels at once. Suddenly you hear how badly you’ve been approaching music, but now that you have “permission,” you hear your own voice and you can interpret composers. [I should speak in 1st person: I heard how badly I’d been approaching music. Maybe you guys are already there.] The experience made a real musician of me. I wish I could have stayed with it and performed widely, but after a few years of performing a lot, I had to quit and make a living. Thus, the performing arts management jobs, directorial jobs, audio engineering jobs, MIDI jobs, and digital performance... the list goes on. I wore a lot of hats, but I put my kids through college, including Yale!] Now I’ve retired from all that stuff. I play piano from 4 to 6 hours a day, and immersing myself in literally the world’s greatest composers is like heaven on earth. I spend a lot of time with Sebastian Bach. So amazing. French Suites, English Suites, the Preludes... (my remaining life is too short to tackle all the fugues!) But it takes me back to what I was doing on the sax - I wanted to know what those composers knew. I wanted to interpret their works, feel their music, know their musicality. And saxophone will do that, but it’s the hardest thing I ever did in my life. Physically demanding... (try Villa-Lobos’s BB#5 Aria on soprano modeling your breath after Victoria de Los Angeles, slowly... it’s like running a mile. The Prokofiev Sonata is more like a marathon!) but this instrument that you can play wrong but it works anyway, becomes very stubborn and cumbersome when trying to perform violin and flute acrobatics. Even Bach’s V.Partitas & Sonatas are incredibly demanding. The thing that made it possible for me was the mouthpiece exercise. I trace nearly all my technical breakthroughs to that one exercise, combined of course with all the exercises I would do anyway. But that one was the key that opened up all the others. I’ve written too much. Sorry... but not a lot of traffic here. Maybe you’ll see it. Maybe not. But my best to both of you, and I’m so glad to see the incredible improvement in sax playing and pedagogy over the last 40 years. I wish I could have been a part of it, but really I think I had a great musical career doing “other things.” Sax served its purpose for me, and I still have a quartet of old Mark VIs that I play now and then. And I did play a small roll somewhere by writing the original core of the SaxFAQ, including the mouthpiece exercise. I wrote a lot of it, but not some of the other stuff attributed to me. I got letters from all over the world for years - over a thousand - thanking me for “changing their lives,” and it felt good to be able to share that. But I probably wouldn’t go back. I’m too old for that kind of workout again. Like doing ballet while holding your breath for 30 minutes. And Piano has me right where I want to be. But power to you both! You’re doing a great job! Truly.
Thanks for sharing your researches. 😊 🎷 All the best, Lucia from Just4Sax
I feel lucky to listen n enjoy your sax music. thank you
Thanks so much! I would love to hear you all playing in person with an orchestra. Love the comment on feeling the time. I remember the first rehearsal I did of Pictures and thinking that I had played the solo nicely, but was mortified when the conductor asked me if I could hear the cellos because I wasn’t with them. It was a totally different way for me of conceptualizing the time. Also appreciate the discussion of having to sit for a long while before playing. I remember stressing out for weeks about that first entrance in the Prokofiev. Every day I would pick up the horn cold and try to play that first solo entrance. It was so hard, but what a wonderful experience. Do you have a favorite excerpt? Do you have a most terrifying one?
thank you so much for this resource. Very very interesting stuff!
so many gems in here. thanks for posting
Very Nice video
💘
Fantastic!
Do you accept private lessons
My apologies for the strange PowerPoint view... I promise it was full-screen on my end! Thanks to Dr. Nabb for the opportunity to speak on this great platform/resource for the saxophone community! I'm happy to answer follow up questions :)
Great info Diane!
Great chat to listen to! 🎷
Hahaha saxophone go brrr
Teaching always keeping the tongue high in the back of the oral cavity would result in a relatively limited tonal spectrum, no?
interesting
So who’s your favorite doctor 🤔
Good one..was looking for erricson and got here..very useful
This is such a great interview, thank you!
Glad you liked it!
this is SOO insightful. Thank you so much!!!!!!
Great Q&A!
Nice seeing a familiar face here
Subbed! kzread.info/dash/bejne/nqdmprR7qLiplag.html