My goal is to be able to perform jazz improvisation at a level suitable for amateur jam sessions and gigs, at least those encountered in my area (semi-rural England). A prerequisite is, of course, being able to play the trombone adequately, which I am working on with lessons locally as and when possible. The tuition available around here is primarily geared towards training brass band players AFAICT, but all such players I know have excellent tone and reading skills so that's worth doing (though I don't want to read treble clef so I won't play in such a band).
There's plenty of discussion here about theory, transcription, listening etc. etc., which I am already doing but in the context of the double bass. I can improvise on the bass sufficiently well for the amateur circuit and play in public regularly. I plan to keep working on this for as long as I am capable; there is certainly a vast amount more to learn. But, what I know so far doesn't appear to carry across to the trombone; what I can hear in my head comes out of the bass without too much effort, but on the trombone I am floundering once I leave the written score or basic scale. Even the likes of "Blue Bossa" or "Autumn Leaves" are elusive.
Of course, the answer is probably to spend a long time swotting scales and arpeggios, but perhaps a different approach is needed from that which I used for bass. On the bass the strings are tuned in fourths and so each interval looks the same whatever note one may be starting from, and I can have an image of it in my mind's eye which acts as a sort of linear cycle of fourths, making transposition and translating a sound to a finger movement relatively easy. I don't have any equivalent way to think about where notes are on the trombone.
There was an interesting comment here: viewtopic.php?p=162986&sid=e58c419adbc4 ... 6a#p162986
So, I wonder if anyone has any suggestions on how this might work, examples of exercises, or suggestions for approaches that might assist in getting closer to that stage of the sound in one's head coming out the instrument.Use of alternate positions and learning to play "against the grain" to minimize slide movement while staying in whatever chord or key you're in is pretty unique to the trombone. Basically watch a few Frank Rosolino videos -- everything he does is based on lip exercises within chords as they lie in stacked, or only slightly offset positions/partials.