Tag: horn technique

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  • You’re Only As Good As Your Ears

    You’re Only As Good As Your Ears

    While practicing is necessary to improve, you can only improve what you hear!

  • No Time To Practice

    No Time To Practice

    “I didn’t have time to practice this week, I had too much to do.” It’s an excuse that everyone who has been teaching for more than 15 minutes has heard. It’s also an excuse that almost everyone who has played an instrument for more than a week has made. But it’s a lie. And no…

  • Teaching Musical Interpretation: Learn, Listen, Count

    Teaching Musical Interpretation: Learn, Listen, Count

    In years of working with students on the horn, one of the most difficult concepts to teach (at least for me), has been the idea of musical phrasing. I imagine that this is (at least in part) because getting a strong set of fundamentals took me so long. I don’t know if this is true…

  • Do More in Less Time: 80/20 Your Practice Next Year

    Do More in Less Time: 80/20 Your Practice Next Year

    The is an old “rule” that’s commonly used in business, but I think that it has some great application in the music world too. The 80/20 Principle: In Brief The basic idea of the 80/20 Principle (also called the Pareto Principle) is that in most cases, 80% (or so) of results come from 20% (or…

  • Practice Roadblocks? 2 Quick Fixes to Try First!

    Practice Roadblocks? 2 Quick Fixes to Try First!

    This time of year, most students (or at least most of my students) are beginning to work more diligently on their All-State music. While July and August are taken up with marching band camps and some intense after-school rehearsals, by the end of September most schools are doing at least some concert band work, and…

  • Another [Great] Julie Landsman Interview!

    Another [Great] Julie Landsman Interview!

    It looks like Julie Landsman is making the rounds to all sorts of different musical blogs, and her insights continue to be both interesting and energizing! A few weeks ago I posted about several different interviews that Julie Landsman has done – two different Horn Hangouts with Sarah Willis, an interview at BrassChicks.com, and her…

  • Scales, Caring, and Cursing

    Scales, Caring, and Cursing

    If you’ve been in band or orchestra for any length of time, then the constant badgering from directors, sectional coaches, and private teachers to “practice your scales” is probably very familiar. If you’ve taught band, orchestra, sectionals, or private lessons, then the almost-automatic eye roll from students when you tell them to learn their scales is…

  • Interview(s) with Julie Landsman

    I think that it goes without saying that Julie Landsman has had an incredible and inspiring career. Julie was the principal horn of the Metropolitan Opera Orchestra for an incredible 25 years (1985-2010), a teacher at Julliard since 1989, and has long been a proponent of mind and body balance and conditioning in horn playing…

  • Looking to Remove Bad Habits? Two Strategies You May Not Have Tried

    Looking to Remove Bad Habits? Two Strategies You May Not Have Tried

    Too much pressure. Incorrect mouthpiece placement. Too much “smile” in the embouchure. Lousy right-hand position. Too little attention to intention. These are some of the bad habits I’ve had in my playing over the past 20+ years of playing the horn. These bad habits weren’t learned overnight, and moving past them also didn’t happen overnight.…

  • New Custom Horn Model – Lukas/Pinc Horn

    New Custom Horn Model – Lukas/Pinc Horn

    As I write this post, I was able to try out a new model horn several weeks ago from one of the best custom horn makers working today – Dan Vidican. Dan is fairly well-known for his excellent Lukas horn, and this new horn will likely become just as popular as his flagship instrument. This…