Marshall Gilkes Warmup
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Marshall Gilkes Warmup
I remember there being a thread about the Marshall Gilkes mouthpiece and just a lot of general love of his work. Came across this warm-up routine he made (and video of it). Just wanted to share as figured there'd be interested parties, if they don't already know about it. Been totally kicking my butt the last few days!
https://www.marshallgilkes.com/store/c7 ... utine.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6wId2tLDXYs
https://www.marshallgilkes.com/store/c7 ... utine.html
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6wId2tLDXYs
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
He didn't look like he even took interest until it went over high Bb. I really liked the intervals section. The one part started to sound like Marstellar exercises. It's incredible how he flows through the ranges seemingly effortlessly. There's a lot to pick up just watching him play. Thanks for the link.
MG was in my area this past winter and for one reason or another I didn't go. Still kicking myself for that. It was a small event too.
MG was in my area this past winter and for one reason or another I didn't go. Still kicking myself for that. It was a small event too.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
A very nice warmup, the best I´ve seen in many years. A very good buy!
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
Thanks for sharing. It's a great routine, but it is also great to have his playing as a model.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
Y'all're most welcome! It's amazing how much ease he can play it with. I love getting to hear players like that play their version of basics.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
I wonder why the whole thing is in classical style. It seems like it would be useful to apply some hip rhythms to the notes.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
Yes, interesting to hear someone that good play just the basic routines. Just to see they do it, and get their energy. Very inspiring. Often when the masters perform we only get to hear the real difficult stuff, things that are compleatly out of reach for most players.
/Tom
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
Heard an interview with John Fedchock and evidently his warm-up is pretty 'straight ahead' too. When I need to be in maintenance mode, I tend to do that as well even though I do mostly commercial stuff. Sprinkle in some excerpts to keep my chops in shape too.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
The inspiration for my wondering is this:
https://www.bilibili.com/video/BV1Ys411d766/
When a guy like that says what he does and it's completely contrary to what everyone else does, well, that presents a challenge. Separately I found a fellow telling a story about a clinic where the warmup question was asked, and the same answer ensued. Once could be pulling someone's leg. Twice seems like serious business.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
I think we need to look at this from both the individual perspective as from the statistc point of view. For an specific induvidual this is the best warmup ever but in general according to statistic (what moster people do) it isn't a very good warmup.baileyman wrote: ↑Sun Jul 30, 2023 5:38 am
The inspiration for my wondering is this:
https://www.bilibili.com/video/BV1Ys411d766/
When a guy like that says what he does and it's completely contrary to what everyone else does, well, that presents a challenge. Separately I found a fellow telling a story about a clinic where the warmup question was asked, and the same answer ensued. Once could be pulling someone's leg. Twice seems like serious business.
Lol It made me laugh!
/Tom
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
Just my opinion, but I don't really read it as being in a classical style. It seems like it's more playing simply and focused on coordinating all the physical systems of playing rather than playing in any specific style.
It seems, at least in my experience, a lot of the lessons I've had with players who are active jazz players and general freelancers, seem to warmup up/focus on similar things. It's always made sense to my brain in thinking of it as neutral- like it's just a basic square note that comes from even articulations and blow, then you can shape it to be whatever you need. Seems more difficult to start with something in a specific style and then remove it to change styles. If that makes sense?
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
Yes, I think that view makes a lot of sense.mbarbier wrote: ↑Sun Jul 30, 2023 8:53 amJust my opinion, but I don't really read it as being in a classical style. It seems like it's more playing simply and focused on coordinating all the physical systems of playing rather than playing in any specific style.
It seems, at least in my experience, a lot of the lessons I've had with players who are active jazz players and general freelancers, seem to warmup up/focus on similar things. It's always made sense to my brain in thinking of it as neutral- like it's just a basic square note that comes from even articulations and blow, then you can shape it to be whatever you need. Seems more difficult to start with something in a specific style and then remove it to change styles. If that makes sense?
Yet it seems spending so much regular practice time on the simple and focused also means playing downbeats, one and three, without lilt, without swing, without flitting across the partials like a dirtbike racer over the small hills. It seems to me that kind of style training, which is incidental to the routine, could be detrimental to someone focused on swing improvisation. Perhaps it accounts for how often the trombone improvisor is on the downbeat, without much in the way of approach figures, without much rhythmic variety, or perhaps how often honking but with great sound. That's what I hear, anyway.
Maybe this isn't so important in the commercial style area where in fact a guy would be hired to play a lot of halves and wholes with small bore sound. Maybe this would only be important to the improvisor.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
Where are you hearing this? Which new recordings or performances have you listened to which made you think this?baileyman wrote: ↑Sun Jul 30, 2023 9:12 amIt seems to me that kind of style training, which is incidental to the routine, could be detrimental to someone focused on swing improvisation. Perhaps it accounts for how often the trombone improvisor is on the downbeat, without much in the way of approach figures, without much rhythmic variety, or perhaps how often honking but with great sound. That's what I hear, anyway.mbarbier wrote: ↑Sun Jul 30, 2023 8:53 am
Just my opinion, but I don't really read it as being in a classical style. It seems like it's more playing simply and focused on coordinating all the physical systems of playing rather than playing in any specific style.
It seems, at least in my experience, a lot of the lessons I've had with players who are active jazz players and general freelancers, seem to warmup up/focus on similar things. It's always made sense to my brain in thinking of it as neutral- like it's just a basic square note that comes from even articulations and blow, then you can shape it to be whatever you need. Seems more difficult to start with something in a specific style and then remove it to change styles. If that makes sense?
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
I'm sorry.ngrinder wrote: ↑Sun Jul 30, 2023 9:21 amWhere are you hearing this? Which new recordings or performances have you listened to which made you think this?baileyman wrote: ↑Sun Jul 30, 2023 9:12 am
It seems to me that kind of style training, which is incidental to the routine, could be detrimental to someone focused on swing improvisation. Perhaps it accounts for how often the trombone improvisor is on the downbeat, without much in the way of approach figures, without much rhythmic variety, or perhaps how often honking but with great sound. That's what I hear, anyway.
Where have you not?
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
Well, Marshall, for one.
Ryan Keberle's Considerando
Rob Edward's Upswing
Javier Nero's Kemet
Alan Ferber's Up High, Down Low
Those are all new releases this year, and from my perspective none of them fall into the category: "on the downbeat, without much in the way of approach figures, without much rhythmic variety, or perhaps how often honking but with great sound."
If you've been keeping up with these albums and modern trombone in general and that's what you hear, to each their own. It just hasn't been my experience listening to these folks and many others.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
If jazz is a living art, it will change over time.
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Interim Instructor, the University of Oklahoma
Faculty, Manhattan School of Music
Faculty, the Longy School of Music
Artist, Long Island Brass and Stephens Horns
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www.williamlang.org
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
This doesn't seem like classical style, to me. Every trombone player I've ever known, regardless of how they view themselves, does some version of this.baileyman wrote: ↑Thu Jul 27, 2023 7:19 amYet it seems spending so much regular practice time on the simple and focused also means playing downbeats, one and three, without lilt, without swing, without flitting across the partials like a dirtbike racer over the small hills. It seems to me that kind of style training, which is incidental to the routine, could be detrimental to someone focused on swing improvisation.
To me, this is just playing basic exercises on the trombone. It's like an athlete limbering up, a runner doing wind sprints, a basketball player practicing free throws and three-point shots and doing suicide drills. It's just basics, and serves as the foundation for whatever you want to play in music, but is not music itself.
What about it seems "classical" to you, other than everything starting on a downbeat, and how in the world would it be detrimental to improvisation? I've heard similar warmups from Carl Fontana, Frank Rosolino, Bill Watrous, Andy Martin, Bob McChesney, etc. Doesn't seem to harm any of them.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
I see what baileyman is getting at but I think the general dearth of great improvising trombonists is more a matter of what we aren’t practicing enough (harmonic movement, rhythmic vocabulary) rather than what we’re practicing too much.
That being said, I don’t like how this warm up spends so much time and face energy on drills. One of the whole benefits of understanding and reinforcing good playing mechanics is that it allows you to spend less time and energy on drills and get more quickly to playing music, whether that be repertoire or working on tunes or transcribing or whatnot.
Also there are so many ways to practice scales alone that you can be creatively and intellectually stimulated while still working on “basics”. A full half hour routine that’s set in stone doesn’t seem to me like the best use of energy.
That being said, I don’t like how this warm up spends so much time and face energy on drills. One of the whole benefits of understanding and reinforcing good playing mechanics is that it allows you to spend less time and energy on drills and get more quickly to playing music, whether that be repertoire or working on tunes or transcribing or whatnot.
Also there are so many ways to practice scales alone that you can be creatively and intellectually stimulated while still working on “basics”. A full half hour routine that’s set in stone doesn’t seem to me like the best use of energy.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
Thanks much for this. A very good morning of listening.ngrinder wrote: ↑Sun Jul 30, 2023 10:48 amWell, Marshall, for one.
Ryan Keberle's Considerando
Rob Edward's Upswing
Javier Nero's Kemet
Alan Ferber's Up High, Down Low
Those are all new releases this year, and from my perspective none of them fall into the category: "on the downbeat, without much in the way of approach figures, without much rhythmic variety, or perhaps how often honking but with great sound."
If you've been keeping up with these albums and modern trombone in general and that's what you hear, to each their own. It just hasn't been my experience listening to these folks and many others.
I have not heard many of these players. Some of them have admirable time and variety, as you said. Ferber's Nonet is amazing. While I think I can hear what you're saying in them, I don't find myself wanting to listen to them, except for Edwards, but that's personal I suppose. Edwards plays much closer to my own imagination. I'm glad to hear people succeeding on rhythm, though. ( Well, except for Keberle, though it may just be me who cannot find the time in his stuff.)
Gilkes is really beyond category. Incidentally, related to another topic elsewhere, he explains his tongue as "dutter", similar to the "dither" I have tried and failed at. And for this topic he says: "My daily routine is pretty much rooted in classical stuff." https://8thposition.wordpress.com/2014/ ... -gilkes/2/ His stuff is too far away to get started on, like Rosolino. I'd like to hear some standards from him, though.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
I fully agree. Best is to as fast as possible get to the point you can be your own teacher, that's when new things really can start to happen.There are of course two sides of the coin. When is that point reached? Good analyzemusicofnote wrote: ↑Tue Aug 01, 2023 3:43 am My $.02
Learning about what people do for warm-ups is interesting. Learning WHY they do this, that or the other is also interesting - actually even more so. In the course of my career (which is now over due to sporadic old-age lip tremors that come and go) I've experimented a LOT and have come across specific exercises which I can use to really warm up my entire playing apparatus from lips to air intake and output to bodily "feels" to actual sound to extended registers to articulations. It incorporates many things and leaves out many more, yet works opitmally for ME as my own individual player.
In my younger days, what I noticed was, that the quickest thing that could literally destroy my playing for a session or even a day, was to warm-up according to someone else's notion of what the best warm-up is, so I began to studiously avoid any masterclasses, workshops, courses that consisted of or even started out with group "warm-ups". I've lived a content, happy, even prosperous life ever since. (grin) But again, that's just my $.02
/Tom
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
I don't know if this is a distinction anyone else agrees with, but I draw a line between a "warmup" and a "daily routine."
IMHO a warmup just gets you ready to play and should take no more than 10 minutes. Like an athlete you do enough motion to warm the muscles (long tones), do some stretching (arpeggios), and a few wind sprints (scales, intervals and licks) to get ready to make your body perform. Then you're done. 10 minutes tops. The purpose is to get ready to play.
A daily routine usually takes about 30-40 minutes and incorporates all those same long tones, arpeggios, intervals, etc., but pushes them farther, exercises your chops over the entire range both directions, and adds a few more exercises. It's a workout, not a warmup. It keeps your chops focused, strong, agile, gives you range and facility. Like going to the gym and lifting weights. The purpose is to make/keep your chops strong and agile, and keep them centered and consistent.
To me, Gilkes' routine thing is the latter. It's way too much for a warmup.
Or does everyone do 35-minute warmups and I'm just out of step?
IMHO a warmup just gets you ready to play and should take no more than 10 minutes. Like an athlete you do enough motion to warm the muscles (long tones), do some stretching (arpeggios), and a few wind sprints (scales, intervals and licks) to get ready to make your body perform. Then you're done. 10 minutes tops. The purpose is to get ready to play.
A daily routine usually takes about 30-40 minutes and incorporates all those same long tones, arpeggios, intervals, etc., but pushes them farther, exercises your chops over the entire range both directions, and adds a few more exercises. It's a workout, not a warmup. It keeps your chops focused, strong, agile, gives you range and facility. Like going to the gym and lifting weights. The purpose is to make/keep your chops strong and agile, and keep them centered and consistent.
To me, Gilkes' routine thing is the latter. It's way too much for a warmup.
Or does everyone do 35-minute warmups and I'm just out of step?
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
“don't know if this is a distinction anyone else agrees with, but I draw a line between a "warmup" and a "daily routine.”
I was thinking the same thing but figured that maybe for Marshall it is just a warmup.
I was thinking the same thing but figured that maybe for Marshall it is just a warmup.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
Yes, my warmup is less than 5 minutes but I guess some think of a warmup the way I think of a daily workout.
When I was younger I considered my warmup to be about 40 minutes. If I had not done all that then I thought I was not going to be able to perform. It changed. Maybe M Gilkes needs that long routine before he can perform the stuff he is performing which is way more advanced than what I'm doing.
/Tom
Last edited by imsevimse on Tue Aug 01, 2023 12:51 pm, edited 3 times in total.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
That was my thought too. It seemed more of a routine than a warmup.tbdana wrote: ↑Tue Aug 01, 2023 8:22 am I don't know if this is a distinction anyone else agrees with, but I draw a line between a "warmup" and a "daily routine."
To me, Gilkes' routine thing is the latter. It's way too much for a warmup.
Or does everyone do 35-minute warmups and I'm just out of step?
It also seemed a struggle to play continuously and finish in 35 minutes. I've tried it a couple times now. My normal time for something like that would be at least twice that. But I rest a lot between short playing sections - well not really resting because I fit my exercise routine in that way. And I couldn't play the flexibility section that fast. I can get up to the F but at nowhere near that speed.
I am curious about the tone changes as he nears the extremes in the legato scale section. There are notes in each scale as he gets way up there that just sound different, like when a soprano has to change the vowel to get response.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
Glad you enjoyed some of it!baileyman wrote: ↑Mon Jul 31, 2023 8:33 amThanks much for this. A very good morning of listening.ngrinder wrote: ↑Sun Jul 30, 2023 10:48 am
Well, Marshall, for one.
Ryan Keberle's Considerando
Rob Edward's Upswing
Javier Nero's Kemet
Alan Ferber's Up High, Down Low
Those are all new releases this year, and from my perspective none of them fall into the category: "on the downbeat, without much in the way of approach figures, without much rhythmic variety, or perhaps how often honking but with great sound."
If you've been keeping up with these albums and modern trombone in general and that's what you hear, to each their own. It just hasn't been my experience listening to these folks and many others.
I have not heard many of these players. Some of them have admirable time and variety, as you said. Ferber's Nonet is amazing. While I think I can hear what you're saying in them, I don't find myself wanting to listen to them, except for Edwards, but that's personal I suppose. Edwards plays much closer to my own imagination. I'm glad to hear people succeeding on rhythm, though. ( Well, except for Keberle, though it may just be me who cannot find the time in his stuff.)
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
Thanks to mbarbier for posting this. I sprung for the ten bucks and inserted the pages into a binder where I keep the Remington and Paul the Trombonist daily + warmup exercises.
I've been a musician my entire life, but a trombonist for only 5 years. EVERY exercise, scale, etude, study, song, part, etc., is a learning experience for me. Since I've also played the flute, I transposed the Reichert 7 Daily Exercises to bass clef and include a page of those in my daily session.
I call my daily practice a "session." It includes warmups, long tones, lip slurs, scales, and something from Rubank, Remington, Reichert, Tyrell, the Arban phrasing songs, Rochut, Aebersold, and improvisation with and without charts. Once a week I play some trumpet/trombone duets with a trumpet friend of mine who can read very well but can't improvise; we play some Shuebruk duets from 100 years ago that I found online.
I also listen every day to recordings by great jazz trombonists, both living and gone. Gilkes approach is novel, and he says some of it comes from his teacher, Buddy Baker.
I have an excellent trombone teacher, who is known for his jazz work as well as his symphony and commercial playing.
It's all good, it's all valuable, and it's up to each of us to determine how we want to spend our practice time and ANY time we have remaining, right?
I've been a musician my entire life, but a trombonist for only 5 years. EVERY exercise, scale, etude, study, song, part, etc., is a learning experience for me. Since I've also played the flute, I transposed the Reichert 7 Daily Exercises to bass clef and include a page of those in my daily session.
I call my daily practice a "session." It includes warmups, long tones, lip slurs, scales, and something from Rubank, Remington, Reichert, Tyrell, the Arban phrasing songs, Rochut, Aebersold, and improvisation with and without charts. Once a week I play some trumpet/trombone duets with a trumpet friend of mine who can read very well but can't improvise; we play some Shuebruk duets from 100 years ago that I found online.
I also listen every day to recordings by great jazz trombonists, both living and gone. Gilkes approach is novel, and he says some of it comes from his teacher, Buddy Baker.
I have an excellent trombone teacher, who is known for his jazz work as well as his symphony and commercial playing.
It's all good, it's all valuable, and it's up to each of us to determine how we want to spend our practice time and ANY time we have remaining, right?
"What does not destroy me, makes me stronger." Nietzsche
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
What constitutes a warmup or practice routine depends on where you are in your development, what you're doing correctly or incorrectly for your own face, and what else you have already done that day, the day before, or that week.
Many players need time to warm up into all the incorrect stuff they're used to doing. When you're playing totally correctly you don't need much warmup, if any.
Somebody like Marshall or anybody else putting out a book of warmups doesn't mean that's really what he does himself.
Many players need time to warm up into all the incorrect stuff they're used to doing. When you're playing totally correctly you don't need much warmup, if any.
Somebody like Marshall or anybody else putting out a book of warmups doesn't mean that's really what he does himself.
"I know a thing or two because I've seen a thing or two."
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
Warmups should be straight ahead. If one is fundamentally sound the "flashy" stuff will always be there. I know people who warmup with the "licks" and cannot attack or sustain notes properly.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
Sometimes, the word "warm-up" is used in routines like this, where much of the material is actually "maintenance" and "technical practice". I'm sure that the easiest 5 - 10 minutes of what Marshall put on this video is really what constitutes an actual warm-up, but much of the rest of it is made up of exercises that he has used to help develop his range, flexibility and technique to such a high level, and what he uses to maintain all of that.
A great bit of advice that Joe Alessi gave to the participants at one of the Seminars I went to was to get there early and do your own routine before the Group Warm-ups. Everybody has things that they do that addresses some personal issue or need in their playing, and somebody else's warm-up may skip that or address some other area that aren't relevant. Still, it's great to go through other people's routines from time to time to get new ideas, and discover new ways to work on an issue.
I liked watching Marshall's video because it is really a window into how he practices, and how he has developed such control over the instrument. It's definitely not just talent or luck - there is an incredible work ethic there.
Jim Scott
A great bit of advice that Joe Alessi gave to the participants at one of the Seminars I went to was to get there early and do your own routine before the Group Warm-ups. Everybody has things that they do that addresses some personal issue or need in their playing, and somebody else's warm-up may skip that or address some other area that aren't relevant. Still, it's great to go through other people's routines from time to time to get new ideas, and discover new ways to work on an issue.
I liked watching Marshall's video because it is really a window into how he practices, and how he has developed such control over the instrument. It's definitely not just talent or luck - there is an incredible work ethic there.
Jim Scott
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
Further, in a jazz context, if one spends so much time playing square, it seems likely to come out the horn that way in solo. I think I hear this all the time. Someone may clearly work on sound, range, honkin' volume, tonguing in powers of 2, use of air for swoopy range effects, because that's the stuff that comes out of their horn well. What doesn't come out is indicating the time, syncopation, offbeat figures, swing feel, melody, indicating the harmony, so I assume most people don't practice these things.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
Maybe but that's on the player to work on after they've "warmed up."baileyman wrote: ↑Thu Nov 09, 2023 5:38 amFurther, in a jazz context, if one spends so much time playing square, it seems likely to come out the horn that way in solo. I think I hear this all the time. Someone may clearly work on sound, range, honkin' volume, tonguing in powers of 2, use of air for swoopy range effects, because that's the stuff that comes out of their horn well. What doesn't come out is indicating the time, syncopation, offbeat figures, swing feel, melody, indicating the harmony, so I assume most people don't practice these things.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
Breaking out the Arbans book isn't going to hurt you. Although, agreed, that if that's all you do, you won't get better at things other than that.WGWTR180 wrote: ↑Thu Nov 09, 2023 6:07 amMaybe but that's on the player to work on after they've "warmed up."baileyman wrote: ↑Thu Nov 09, 2023 5:38 am
Further, in a jazz context, if one spends so much time playing square, it seems likely to come out the horn that way in solo. I think I hear this all the time. Someone may clearly work on sound, range, honkin' volume, tonguing in powers of 2, use of air for swoopy range effects, because that's the stuff that comes out of their horn well. What doesn't come out is indicating the time, syncopation, offbeat figures, swing feel, melody, indicating the harmony, so I assume most people don't practice these things.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
Does anyone know what "Stagger breathing" instruction means? In the Flexibility section, around 26:40, bar 200.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
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Last edited by iranzi on Sun Oct 20, 2024 9:43 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
If you listen carefully to that section, there are places in every flexibility where he drops a note to breathe but continues in tempo. Do it like he does.
- iranzi
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
This finally makes sense, thank you timothy42b and tbdana !timothy42b wrote: ↑Tue Oct 01, 2024 9:34 am there are places in every flexibility where he drops a note to breathe but continues in tempo
Last edited by iranzi on Wed Oct 02, 2024 2:49 pm, edited 3 times in total.
- Savio
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
I get so inspired when listening this! It seems he can play everything. Routines he call it, warm ups? Mine is coffee first. I think the aspects of routines or warm up is the the same we all do? Maybe not in same order each day. lip slurs ,long notes, scales, articulation, Coffee?
I would be careful to tell what to do because it depends so much. But since I teach a lot of kids I always tell one word; "carefully" They don't understand warm up. So I explain them to start everyday like they have never played before. Start with the first notes or tunes you feel you know good.
Leif
I would be careful to tell what to do because it depends so much. But since I teach a lot of kids I always tell one word; "carefully" They don't understand warm up. So I explain them to start everyday like they have never played before. Start with the first notes or tunes you feel you know good.
Leif
- tbdana
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Re: Marshall Gilkes Warmup
I start every practice session with this routine. When doing that, it's good to vary things after a while. Like, play minor scales instead of major scales, do different intervals, etc.
One thing I've been doing recently that has turned out to be really helpful is playing the entire thing as softly as I possibly can. Not worrying about tone at first, just getting the very softest sound I can on the first note, and playing the whole routine that softly, from the pedal E to the double-high Bb.
I've gotten better by doing that. It has really helped me in two areas: getting good lip vibration with very little air going through them, and playing delicately and precisely with a lot of facility across the whole horn. Both those things have real world benefits for me.
I mention this in case anyone else does this routine and would benefit from improving those two things. I'm always happy to be able to play super soft. As Ralph Sauer once said, you find out who the real players are when it's time to play soft. And I do love getting more facility on the horn, and softly with better accuracy in all ranges. If those are goals you share, you might want to try this for a bit and see if you have similar results. And if you try it, please let me know how it goes.
One thing I've been doing recently that has turned out to be really helpful is playing the entire thing as softly as I possibly can. Not worrying about tone at first, just getting the very softest sound I can on the first note, and playing the whole routine that softly, from the pedal E to the double-high Bb.
I've gotten better by doing that. It has really helped me in two areas: getting good lip vibration with very little air going through them, and playing delicately and precisely with a lot of facility across the whole horn. Both those things have real world benefits for me.
I mention this in case anyone else does this routine and would benefit from improving those two things. I'm always happy to be able to play super soft. As Ralph Sauer once said, you find out who the real players are when it's time to play soft. And I do love getting more facility on the horn, and softly with better accuracy in all ranges. If those are goals you share, you might want to try this for a bit and see if you have similar results. And if you try it, please let me know how it goes.