Quote from: bonesmarsh on Dec 11, 2017, 04:33AMPractice does not make perfect, practice makes permanent.
If you start incorrectly, it takes decades to undo the lost time. Great lessons at the beginning are the best. Even the best teachers have limitations. Sometimes you even have to switch to break the barriers of your mind.
The best lesson I ever got online? One of Charlie Parker's old band mates, road room mates, from his beginnings on the road was interviewed at an elderly age.
What did Charlie Parker's room mate say about life on the road with Charlie Parker, when Charlie was not famous yet?: " Charlie? You never heard a guy practice that slowly in your life!".
Agreed! Had my first four years with a teacher who could not play trombone. He was probably self taught on his instruments. After that I had an hungarian teacher who made me change my full-hand grip on the slide to a looser grip and to practice a lot but as said; practice wrong permanents wrong so most from those years had to be relearned. At the same time I had a trumpet teacher for one year who put the Arban's etudes on my music stand and I had to compete with him on the lessons. I learned to read music but the sound and flex and range was bad. The only thing I learned that was worth learning those first four/five years was to read music and to transpose a lot. All teachers up until now had missed my smile embouchure. Then I got a good teacher who helped me take the step to change the way I produced my sound. Everything was then changed in time. I had to re-learn how to both inhale and exhale, since I had been taught that the stomach should be "tense". One teacher put his fist I'm my stomach and had me push and said this was how to do it. I had to relearn all that as well as a complete change of embouchure. After this I managed to be accepted at the music college and from there articulation, range and quality of tone became better in small steps. I still have lots of things to improve. Things that remind me of where I started. I think it is just until resently I can play something and just think of the music and let it happen.
The right teacher must come along and the student needs to be ready. When you have all in place you need to play with better players. From that point you can observe and improve without a teacher, but it doesn't hurt to get advice from someone you trust. You can be a student all your life if you are that kind of a person.
One thing my first teacher taught me was that music was fun. Easily said than done. There is a balance when teaching kids. It must be fun or they quit and play ice-hockey or soccer instead. If you say they do it wrong then they quit. You need to fool them so they learn without thinking of it as hard and wrong. A professonal football player or hockey player gives money and respect. The real raw models are in sports today, and the whole family might watch those athlets on tv daily and discuss how much their value is. Who bought who for what money? Money and public exposure make sports much more important than music. How important is music? It is not easy to compete with sports and the ones who not succeed in sports might choose computers instead. It is more difficult to be a teacher of trombone today. It was easier when I was a teacher in the 80-ies and 90-ies. It must be fun in the competition and still technique needs to be corrected. If you want to hear a trombone you could just buy a record with Christian Lindberg. Much faster and a guaranteed good result. I've actually heard that said from a non musician. Students with time and patience to learn are probably more rare to find today. You can toss them a trombone or you can toss them a ball. Will they learn how to successfully kick a goal or will they learn how to successfully play a high c without a teacher?
/Tom