Monday, January 14, 2019
Your Band Must Acquire
1. Tone Quality
The discussion of tone quality is a very subjective idea. For brass players, keeping the embouchure and aperture firm, flat against the face is the foundation for the core sound. With the proper air speed, voicing with a "tall mouth", spread teeth, and soft, vibrating lips inside the mouthpiece will give the refinement for a mature, characteristic sound. The concert F scale is a good starting point for putting these concepts in motion.
Objectives
- Improved tone quality in extreme registers -- try to eliminate interference in lower notes and thinning of upper notes.
- All notes sound and feel like the Concert F with a transfer of energy to new pitch.
- Move with no gaps or bumps between notes.
2. Starts and Releases
There must be a "point of reference" for the music, and all exercises will work on three things that are inherent in all music:
- Start of sound
- Body of sound
- Release of sound
- All notes should be square, not move, should respond instantly, and be started and stopped as together as possible.
- Each note should have good core and body (solidity) to it, and the sound should move from note to note as evenly as possible.
- All musicians should "play to the back of the note", or get the air speed quick immediately.
- The volume that a sound starts with has to be the same for the duration of the note. (Exception would be a special effect)
- Matching pitch is possible to the extent that the previous bullet items are successful.
- There should be constant reinforcement of the transfer of these ideas/concepts into the body of the rehearsal.
- These concepts will be successful only to the degree that both student and instructor are actively involved both mentally and physically in the learning process.
3. Technical Facility
4. Intonation
5. Rhythmic Accuracy
Simply stated, the printed rhythms must be performed or counted with accuracy. This is not limited to eighth note or sixteenth note rhythms, but includes syncopated rhythms and the release of long notes. In many instances, the release of a long note helps with the entrance of the next rhythm.
6. Precision
This ensemble objective includes sections and the full ensemble "playing together". A common problem is with note values that are half note or longer is for musicians to not subdivide during these notes.
Subdivision - When playing longer, sustained notes, the release point of the note can sometimes be problematic. Dividing the note into eighths or quarters will help define release points.
Metronome - The use of the metronome is a necessity with ensemble rehearsals. The musicians' awareness level must constantly notice the relationship of their part with the steady pulse.
7. Articulation
All note values have the same start to the sound. There seems to be a misconception that whole notes or long notes start a certain way, and that quicker notes, like sixteenth notes, are tongued harder. If this technique can be mastered, certain clarity will begin, such as a camera lens that becomes focused. Remember that articulations also deal with the release point of note values.
Procedure
- Begin with a whole note and proceed through shorter note values to 16th notes.
- Start with notes that touch and work on a firm legato articulation and later a highly defined, very firm articulation (Hard "DI")
- Work on notes that don't touch -- long lifted, short lifted, and staccato notes.
- Do touching and non-touching notes separately at first, then put them together.
Objectives
- Matched note lengths
- Same strength of articulation on every note within various areas
- Direction of line
- Same body of sound on every note
- Feel of subdivision in silences and overall precision
- Tongue must touch in the same place in your mouth every time
- Tongue must touch with the same strength within a given style
- Never breath at a bar line/style change
8. Balance
Balance should be treated as "layers" of color, not just numerous colors blended together. Adopting this approach will allow combinations of timbres to create many desirable effects. Balance involves matching:
- Tonal energy
- Articulation
- Releases
- Rhythmic movement
9. Control of Dynamics & Changes
Dynamics should be relative from section to section. If the entire ensemble has a written forte, adjust the volume from instrument to instrument, depending on each instrument's place in the harmonic series, with the goal of creating a unified ensemble forte. When thinking of volumes of dynamics, answer these two questions:
- What is the opposite of hard?
- What is the opposite of loud?
10. Control of Tempos & Changes
The concept of using numbers in regards to dynamics can also be applied to tempos. Ritardando, rallentando, accelerando, stringendo are all gradual and establishing new tempi. Use of nonverbal cues in your conducting will help with the teaching of this skill.Quarter note exercises such as Flow studies work well; playing 4 quarter notes on a scale or playing an exercise the students know, but subdivided. When applying to a specific musical excerpt:
- Break down the "skill" on concert F
- Rehearse "air only" with fingers and techinique
- Rehearse subdividing all long tones into 8ths
- Perform as written
Organizing the Rehearsal
Your job is to get the "team" on the same page and create a listening environment for the ensemble. Long term planning is your best bet on how to get these things introduced refined and applied to musical examples. Here are some things I do to make all of this happen:
- Think in terms of the week, not the day. It is easy to get hung up on one or two of the ensemble objectives, especially when these are not strengths of your group.
- As you identify your group's strengths and weaknesses, it is easy to ignore the worst ones. Make these weaknesses your best objective, and when you have options in your planning, make it another priority for the day's rehearsal.
- Remember that you are teaching them to play their instruments and learn ensemble skills, not just to play certain musical selections.
Mark McGahey is in his thirtieth year as a music educator. He has been Director of Bands at Keller High School in Keller, TX for twenty-two years. He also directed bands at South Grand Prairie High School in Grand Prairie, TX, and Shawnee High School in Shawnee, OK. In 2015, the Keller High School Band was named a finalist at the prestigious Bands of America Grand National Championships, and a Sudler Shield recipient. Mr. McGahey holds a Bachelor's Degree in Music Education from the University of Oklahoma, where he studied with Gene Thrailkill, William K. Wakefield and Roland Barrett. He was a student of Tom Bennett while earning his Master's Degree in Music Education from Texas A&M in Commerce (formerly East Texas State University). Mark was formerly on the brass staff of the World Champion Cavaliers Drum and Bugle Corps from Rosemont, Illinois. He has authored an instructional DVD entitled The Cavaliers Brass: From the Concert Hall to the Football Field that has been met with international acclaim. |
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