Quote from: WaltTrombone on Sep 24, 2011, 08:18AMHere's a pdf of a bit that I do towards the end of a warmup. Sometimes it's my only warmup. It's good for letting me know if my chops are ready to play, or if I need to take it a little easy at first. If things are too stiff, this'll let me know right away. Yes, I only go down to 5th position for this. You can extend it to 7th, I choose not to. Speed, keep it moving. I usually do it around 120-140 bpm. I don't correct my slide positions for the various flat notes, since I use this more for a lip workout and diagnostic tool.
Of course, everyone has different needs in a routine, this is one that works for me. Let me know what you think of it. Enjoy!
Just my reflections...
A good exercise Walt. It could be a warmup if you do not need a warmup first, just to be able to play that
I mean that at some time the warmup has passed the transitional stage and has become a study or excercise and is not really a warmup anymore. This is individual. For me that happens early. You can of course call it what ever you want. The slurs are still good to play. I do not warm up much if it is not a concert (and I never "warm down"?).
If it is a concert then I think it is more important with a warm up.
The things I use for a warm up is allways played without sheet music. I could be inspired by sheet music like the example you posted of course.
At rehearsals I warm up with a practice mute for about 10-30 seconds. I play ascending/descending chormatic scales and maybe a few slurs or thrills and then I pull out the mute and a short pause will follow for as much as a 1-2 minutes when we put the music together and then we start the rehearsal.
I try to handle the first few minutes of a rehearsal with a bit care. If the first thing is a solo then I dont give all I have. I do not try to play the fastest, highest, strongest or softest I'm capable of. It could lead to a comment from an instructor or fellow musician but often it is not commented at all, but of course I'm not playing with the Stockholm Philharmonic orchestra or the Royal Operahouse so it depends on my situation.
Why do we warm up?
It could be to make the lips swell a bit because we have that as a need like Sabutin says, but It could also be more of a mental thing, a mental adjustment to a concert situation.
I do not feel I need to play a very extended warmup before a concert to put my lips and face in full working order. The extended time for this is maybe 5 minutes. The rest is just some playing to focus at the concert. Just because it feels good.
At a rehearsal I just love to play the trombone. I'm not there for the money or to prove my eligibility to exist. I just want to relax and have fun.
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I do not feel a lot of pressure and somehow I do allow myself to crack a note or two on a rehearsal without having a mental illness following that.
At a concert I strive for the same thing. I do not want cracked notes to happen at a concert though. I guess that is why (hopefully) my mental warm up should help.
Again if errors happen at concerts, and it does happen, even if I have extended my short 30 seconds warm up with a more complete five minutes "take care of lip swelling" warmup and added the mental-playing-feel-good warmup. Some errors could happen at the concert anyhow. It's not the end of the world
/Tom