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cgaiii Heavyweight Member
Joined: 26 Jun 2017 Posts: 1545 Location: Virginia USA
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Posted: Wed Nov 06, 2019 9:03 am Post subject: |
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JayKosta wrote: | 'horse noises' (the international brass player recognition greeting),
Jay |
Wonderful. Thanks for a good laugh. _________________ Bb: Schilke X3L AS SP, Yamaha YTR-6335S
C: Schilke CXL, Kanstul 1510-2
Picc: Kanstul 920
Bb Bugle: Kanstul
Bb Pocket: Manchester Brass
Flugel: Taylor Standard
Bass Trumpet: BAC Custom
Natural Tr: Custom Haas replica by Nikolai Mänttäri Morales |
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scarface Heavyweight Member
Joined: 18 Feb 2004 Posts: 1806
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Posted: Sat Nov 09, 2019 7:41 am Post subject: |
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HERMOKIWI wrote: | I've never known a player who actually puts a stopwatch on measuring exactly "playing time" and "resting time" and balancing it exactly (although I suppose there are players who do this). |
Scott Belck uses a timer I think to help maintain a state of “chop neutral”, where he can play all day. I use one because I have a few different overuse points to manage (lips and jaw muscles). It helps keep me honest about rest, and figure out how long I can play.
At the moment, 1.5 years in, this is what I’m doing:
-25 min session with one minute rests (standard warmup stuff)
-15 min session (Etudes. play 4-8 bar phrase, sing next phrase, rest a little more, play the sung phrase)
-Rest a day after 2-3 days playing to let things catch up.
I’m flexible with it based on whether or not what I’m playing is relatively strenuous. Probably don’t need a minute rest after a mid G long tone for example. At some point I hope to develop good intuition about rest, but having a structure helps keep me from getting too far out of bounds. |
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