mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

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Tbone00
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mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by Tbone00 »

Hello Everybody, Lets open the Pandora's box.

In my last years I have had a teacher who has always been against mouthpiece buzzing because "mouthpiece buzzing is totally different from playing, the resistance is not the same and it can causes tension (especially in the high register) but this year my new teacher is a big fan of mouthpiece buzzing and he recommends using it to warm up, for the high and low register and for the sound because it "help you to use more air". I believe that both arguments are true but I am not aware if I am wasting my time with the mouthpiece or it is really helping me.

what you think about this? why yes or why not to play on the mouthpiece and for what moments yes and for what moments no (with arguments!)

thank you guys!
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BGuttman
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by BGuttman »

A little buzzing is good. A lot, no.

I buzz as my initial warmup to get the embouchure working. I may also buzz as a form of practice at times.

Buzzing for more than 10 minutes or so doesn't help. Take frequent breaks.
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paulyg
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by paulyg »

It's an activity that can help you "strengthen your foundation" if you do it wisely.

Think of that analogy, though- what use is a foundation if you don't build anything on top of it? It is ONLY a supplement to regular playing.
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harrisonreed
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by harrisonreed »

"if you practice on the mouthpiece, you practice a horrible sound"
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by Bach5G »

Yes and no.
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by Kdanielsen »

As long as you realize how it’s different from playing your horn, it can be useful.

I don’t buzz anymore (other than to demonstrate), but I’m glad I did ten years ago.
Kris Danielsen D.M.A.

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Elow
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by Elow »

Rusty
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by Rusty »

I use it in beginner warm ups to Buzz a few sirens and maybe some simple melodies, but I’ve always found it stuffs up my embouchure on the horn due to the different resistance. I prefer taking off my outer slide and doing top tube buzzing, which is a similar resistance to the horn itself.
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hyperbolica
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by hyperbolica »

I like a little freebuzzing, and a little mouthpiece buzzing. But you have to understand why you're doing it. Just doing it to do it is a waste of time. Doing it to strengthen your embouchure and the link between your chops and your ears is why I do it.
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by Savio »

I think this is individual. It might depends on how we do it? For some it might help, for others it might not. We have to try and see. There is maybe no definitive answer. Maybe not do it too much, it can create tension. I do it sometimes in the car as warm up.

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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by FOSSIL »

If your embouchure is stable and self supporting....in other words, not relying on rim pressure or instrument back pressure, freebuzzing and mouthpiece buzzing are valuable tools...I freebuzz on the way to work to warm up. Many fine players need the rim and/or instrument resistance to vibrate their lips effectively and may find free and mouthpiece buzzing detrimental to their playing.
So that adds up to yes and no.

Chris
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by LeTromboniste »

I used to have mouthpiece buzzing as an important part of my warm-up, but at some point I noticed my sound was systemically slightly better and embouchure felt more relaxed on occasional days where I skipped it. I realized it wasn't serving a purpose and wasn't helping anything, so I stopped and haven't looked back.

I still use it as a practice tool though, in particular when I want to isolate issues or clean up passages.
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robcat2075
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by robcat2075 »

This reminds me how much of music pedagogy is just traditions, slogans and anecdotes.

One teacher will insist on something, the next will have no use for it.

Very little of it is validated objectively... who has enough students long enough to do a full double blind clinical trial anyway?

I suspect, deep down, each teacher's repertoire of strategies and tricks is mostly there because it has passed the, "It's what I did, I think it worked for me" test.

I was in a trombone choir where the teacher insisted we freebbuzz our first note before every piece. I guess it worked for him.

I mouthpiece buzz for a few moments before I practice just to get my lips flapping. It makes me feel like I'm more ready. Once, I picked up my horn and played without any buzzing beforehand. It sounded so bad i put it back in the case and didn't take it out for another three years.

If that horn ever gets out of the case again, i will buzz first before I play. I think it worked for me.
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by FOSSIL »

robcat2075 wrote: Tue Oct 20, 2020 8:47 am This reminds me how much of music pedagogy is just traditions, slogans and anecdotes.

One teacher will insist on something, the next will have no use for it.

Very little of it is validated objectively... who has enough students long enough to do a full double blind clinical trial anyway?

I suspect, deep down, each teacher's repertoire of strategies and tricks is mostly there because it has passed the, "It's what I did, I think it worked for me" test.

I was in a trombone choir where the teacher insisted we freebbuzz our first note before every piece. I guess it worked for him.

I mouthpiece buzz for a few moments before I practice just to get my lips flapping. It makes me feel like I'm more ready. Once, I picked up my horn and played without any buzzing beforehand. It sounded so bad i put it back in the case and didn't take it out for another three years.

If that horn ever gets out of the case again, i will buzz first before I play. I think it worked for me.
If that is really all teaching is about, nobody in their right mind would take a lesson.

Chris
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by WilliamLang »

Music is an aural experience, and all around the world is built on deep traditions and a lot of trial and error. It's not surprising that a lot of it is tradition, slogans, and anecdotes. Some chaff gets in the wheat from time to time, but that's true of everything.
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Tbone00
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by Tbone00 »

harrisonreed wrote: Mon Oct 19, 2020 6:54 pm "if you practice on the mouthpiece, you practice a horrible sound"
so if you practice free buzzing do you practice a horrible sound? :pant: :pant:
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by baileyman »

Suppose you have a nice high range free-buzzing but on the piece or horn the same notes are more effortful. Practicing to resolve the difference may be a good idea, that is, to convert the easy free-buzz into easy on the horn.
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by bassbone721 »

I like mouthpiece buzzing because it helps me center all my notes and make sure I'm putting the right pitch into my horn. It's what I've learned but I'm also developing in my playing.
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by harrisonreed »

Tbone00 wrote: Tue Oct 20, 2020 9:33 am
harrisonreed wrote: Mon Oct 19, 2020 6:54 pm "if you practice on the mouthpiece, you practice a horrible sound"
so if you practice free buzzing do you practice a horrible sound? :pant: :pant:
Yes. You have to create resistance somehow using your body to create a buzz without the resistance if the horn to do it for you. That resistance from your body carries over into playing on the horn and you either have to unlearn it or it creates .... "A horrible sound"
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by FOSSIL »

harrisonreed wrote: Tue Oct 20, 2020 5:48 pm
Tbone00 wrote: Tue Oct 20, 2020 9:33 am
so if you practice free buzzing do you practice a horrible sound? :pant: :pant:
Yes. You have to create resistance somehow using your body to create a buzz without the resistance if the horn to do it for you. That resistance from your body carries over into playing on the horn and you either have to unlearn it or it creates .... "A horrible sound"
You obviously have a technique that is unsuited to rim or freebuzzing. Not everyone is like that.

Chris
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by Vegasbound »

Try everything- use what works for YOU !!

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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by harrisonreed »

FOSSIL wrote: Wed Oct 21, 2020 12:33 am
harrisonreed wrote: Tue Oct 20, 2020 5:48 pm

Yes. You have to create resistance somehow using your body to create a buzz without the resistance if the horn to do it for you. That resistance from your body carries over into playing on the horn and you either have to unlearn it or it creates .... "A horrible sound"
You obviously have a technique that is unsuited to rim or freebuzzing. Not everyone is like that.

Chris
In the interest of friendly discussion about the subject, and with no ill intent whatsoever, I'll proceed cautiously. I've written this before and was pooh-poohed, but looking through the studies of the physics of brass I'm sure that most teachers have got it wrong.

I am sure that there is actually no way to create a buzz or freebuzz without introducing extra resistance into the system
, and if you assume that the resistance created by the instrument is the basic state, the "faked" resistance to buzz on stuff that isn't the whole instrument is unhelpful and damaging. Here is why:

1. The sound produced by a brass instrument is a result of the air inside a tube being forced into a sympathetic vibration within that tube. There is a series of points of equilibrium (the harmonic overtone series) where the air column will "slot" and a clear note is produced. So you can change how much you agitate or vibrate or "energize" that air in the tube, but mostly whatever you do will sound bad unless you've hit these "slots" where everything is in equilibrium. Take the resistance (the horn) away, and the lips stop vibrating. Add the horn back on and the pitch starts again. The sound is (or at least should be) from all of the air in the tube vibrating, and not just the sound of the lips in the mouthpiece.

2. In a tube that doesn't change length, like a natural horn, or baroque trumpet, or ... a mouthpiece... the further out of pitch you try to force the sound from these points on the harmonic series, the worse it sounds. This is why trying to lip pitches down in a warm-up (no idea why teachers do that) sounds bad, and the best teachers are always telling their students to play exactly in the center of the pitch, and move the slide to tune. Most students don't know what that means. What they are really saying is to "fix" the length of the tubing first, and to have the lip playing the pitch that is exactly in the center of the point of equilibrium on that fixed length of tubing to get the best sound.

3. Based on the above, the pitch and harmonic series is completely based on the length of the tube, and the level and quality of energy that gets it vibrating. A trombone is like a 9-12 foot tube, and at its full length you can feel that the resistance of the whole system is different. The blow is different in 7th position. How you reach equilibrium and make a beautiful sound in 7th position is very different from 1st position. I think everyone can agree with this. So... What is the length of a mouthpiece? 3 inches? I do not think any human being is capable of playing the actual points of equilibrium on a three inch pipe, and finding the harmonic series. There is hardly any air in it to get vibrating, so it has almost no resistance at all. You would have to move your entire lungs worth of air through the mouthpiece in about one second, and the root of the harmonic series would be like Bb6. So straight away, everything you buzz on a mouthpiece is by its very nature a forced false tone, octaves out of pitch from the harmonic series of the pipe it's buzzed on. Also, just like false tones on the trombone, you must compensate for being so far out of the harmonic series by creating a false point of resistance. It could be that you push your lips together harder than you would of you were playing a trombone, or you put your finger over the hole of the shank, or you REALLY clamp your lips together for free buzzing. But none of that should be happening when you are playing your trombone.

4. If you know #1 above is true, which I think no one can really argue with, and if you know #2 is true, which anyone who has tried to lip false tones or lip a note down a half step can probably agree with, then #3 should logically follow. Mouthpiece buzzing is 100% the practice of false tones on a 3in instrument octaves below its unplayable harmonic series in a way that is completely different to playing the trombone, many hundreds of times different from the difference between the feel of 1st position and 7th. You can try the test if you don't believe it, where you buzz your best middle F and then slowly slide the buzzing mouthpiece into the leadpipe -- it will sound horrible. I have seen one video where a really outstanding player goes from free rim to mouthpiece to horn to try and disprove it, and you can see where he changes his setup for each change.

So, again, that's my friendly and hopefully constructive take on it. There are MANY players who are a thousand times better than me who buzz every day, but I think they'd be 1200 times better than me if they stopped spending time buzzing and unlearning buzzing every time they practiced. The only counterargument that is usually proposed is "no, it actually helps" ... which isn't helpful to anyone. I haven't seen anyone show how it helps. I would love to see something showing what it does to help players improve, and how it doesn't teach them to play with tighter lips. If a teacher teaches "play dead center on the pitch, and if you're out of tune a bit, move the slide but stay centered on it as it changes", I don't know how they can also teach "buzz octaves out of pitch, and keep changing pitches that you can't center on, because the mouthpiece is one length only"
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by Elow »

I forgot who, maybe joe alessi but i don’t know just someone in a good orchestra, said that most players will try to simulate resistance by moving their tongue to feel right. Once they go back to the horn they have a really bad habit. I’m not sure if it’s true, but i always buzz with a leadpipe, easy and something that i have on hand
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by Basbasun »

I think that it is impossible to tell if buzzing is good or bad for someone else. Buzzing can be done on different ways. In the 50th I learned to buzz (in lessons) with the lips pressed together. It actually did nothing good for me, others who buzzed the same way clamed that it made wonder for them. Ok. Both freebuzzing and mpc buzzing was done that way. For me that wasen´t good. I also tried the free buzzing method with the lower lip turned over the bottom teeth, well for me it did nothing good. I do buzz today on a more open way with more air flow (flow does not mean a lot of air, just flow with less resistance) free buzzing needs more lip resisting that mpc buzzing, playing the horn need less resisting then mpc buzzing, so playing F on the and taking the mpc out the horn makes the F stop. I can not tell how anybody else choud buzz, or not buzz especially on the net.
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by Basbasun »

Of coure the reistance changes when playing F on staff on first vs 7 or using the f atachement. Or playing with mutes or playing false tones. Or playing in warm or cold envirement. The profile of the air column changes drasticly when slide goes from first position to seventh. When in seventh position the horn is much more conically, That means that the particals line up differently.
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by harrisonreed »

Basbasun wrote: Wed Oct 21, 2020 5:14 am Of coure the reistance changes when playing F on staff on first vs 7 or using the f atachement. Or playing with mutes or playing false tones. Or playing in warm or cold envirement. The profile of the air column changes drasticly when slide goes from first position to seventh. When in seventh position the horn is much more conically, That means that the particals line up differently.
And that's just the difference between 9ft amd 13ft long. A mouthpiece is 3 in.
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by Pre59 »

Harrison, do you use a gymnasium, exercise bikes, weights etc? If so, do they negatively affect your ability to function or improve it?
baileyman
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by baileyman »

A couple of things are happening with my freebuzz right now. One is that around pedal A it wants a lower pout and upper curl to get lower. It migrates to a different set. And then it will go deep into the double pedals. On the horn it will stretch its setting just about as deep, but the sound has always been unsatisfying. So using the freebuzz as an example, a little conscious pout and curl at about that point is resulting in much better sound. It's not a different set on the horn, just a little nudge in posture.

The other is that high freebuzz happens almost effortlessly (except for air pressure in the torso) well above ordinary horn range. And it will connect down to that pedal point. But in comparison to the piece or the horn, it's clear that high freebuzz wants a lot more "chop in the piece" than has been my practice on the piece or the horn. So I experiment trying to achieve the freebuzz posture on the horn. It sure feels weird, but there are indications something good may happen.

So my vote is all forms of buzzing can provide useful movement inspiration.
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by harrisonreed »

Pre59 wrote: Wed Oct 21, 2020 6:18 am Harrison, do you use a gymnasium, exercise bikes, weights etc? If so, do they negatively affect your ability to function or improve it?

I don't think you can equate the two. Buzzing is not lifting weights. And if it is, then as I've said, I think it's bad form. If you lift weights with bad form, you don't improve, and worst case you get hurt.

But we are talking about tiny muscles. Helper muscles. These tiny muscles usually need better brain/nerve/fiber connections, not 'bulking up' like you'd get from stressing the major muscle groups out with weights.

So, yes, I work out with those things, but no, I don't think trombone playing is about strength. It's about finesse and muscle memory.

Apples and oranges
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by cmcslide »

When I teach, and I know I'm not the only teacher who uses this method, I may have a student sing a short excerpt from an etude, then buzz that same short bit on the mouthpiece and finally play it on the horn and I do get results. When they buzz, I ask them not to try to slot directly into the pitches, but to slide around from pitch to pitch, not even tonguing, and keep steady air moving. I think that this is what they are getting from the buzzing, the concept of a constant air stream. It is this air stream that helps them improve tone and accuracy, not focusing on a really nice buzz. I only ask them to buzz in small doses (like a four bar excerpt).
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by elmsandr »

I don't buzz as much as I used to. Another data point, I do not play nearly as well as I used to.

I think it was on the Bob Sanders episode of "The Trombone Corner" that had a version of 'You buzz, you played better, isn't that enough to tell you that it works?'

I think worrying about the difference in the airstream and resistance of the horn is overthinking the issue. Put on a BERP if you must... there are lessons to be learned from buzzing and making sure the input is good to the system. It is NOT a cure-all. It isn't fool proof that doing it willy-nilly without conscious effort will help. Focused practice, whether scales on the horn or buzzing at the lips or mouthpiece requires attention and feedback. Use your brain and don't copy things that don't help on the horn. Learn to improve the sound by going back and forth to find WHAT a good mouthpiece buzz does on the horn. Then aim for THAT target. Again, do not overthink it.

Some folks buzz a lot, I believe Jay Friedman (also on the Trombone Corner) notes that he buzzes on his 45 minute commute. How much full time is dedicated to buzzing instead of the steering wheel? Dunno, but sounds like a pretty good session.

Reminding me that I need to get a mouthpiece at my desk, lord knows I have enough to set one here.

Cheers,
Andy
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by hyperbolica »

My comments refer to my own experience, not how I believe buzzing should be used or a recommendation for anyone.

Freebuzzing for me only strengthens my high-chops. Specifically, it helps me firm up the muscles on the sides of my mouth that form the embouchure. I only do it a minute or so at a time. I think having strong embouchure muscles helps me play high without needing a lot of mouthpiece pressure. If you rely on the mouthpiece to form your embouchure, freebuzzing may not do anything for you.

I have a hard time buzzing medium or low notes. Horse flapping my lips is something else, I don't consider that buzzing.

I used to crack a lot of notes. That was because the note I was buzzing was higher than the note I was trying to play. So mouthpiece buzzing, and then matching that buzz to the horn pitch has been an important exercise for me. Mouthpiece buzzing to me is about 2 things - muscle memory and ear training - and getting those two things to work together.
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by Elow »

cmcslide wrote: Wed Oct 21, 2020 7:56 am When I teach, and I know I'm not the only teacher who uses this method, I may have a student sing a short excerpt from an etude, then buzz that same short bit on the mouthpiece and finally play it on the horn and I do get results. When they buzz, I ask them not to try to slot directly into the pitches, but to slide around from pitch to pitch, not even tonguing, and keep steady air moving. I think that this is what they are getting from the buzzing, the concept of a constant air stream. It is this air stream that helps them improve tone and accuracy, not focusing on a really nice buzz. I only ask them to buzz in small doses (like a four bar excerpt).
Another approach one of my teachers uses is starting an etude with just glissing. He says to keep everything even and will stop me if i change something. I think it helps
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by cmcslide »

Elow wrote: Wed Oct 21, 2020 9:48 am
cmcslide wrote: Wed Oct 21, 2020 7:56 am When I teach, and I know I'm not the only teacher who uses this method, I may have a student sing a short excerpt from an etude, then buzz that same short bit on the mouthpiece and finally play it on the horn and I do get results. When they buzz, I ask them not to try to slot directly into the pitches, but to slide around from pitch to pitch, not even tonguing, and keep steady air moving. I think that this is what they are getting from the buzzing, the concept of a constant air stream. It is this air stream that helps them improve tone and accuracy, not focusing on a really nice buzz. I only ask them to buzz in small doses (like a four bar excerpt).
Another approach one of my teachers uses is starting an etude with just glissing. He says to keep everything even and will stop me if i change something. I think it helps
Exactly what I ask them to do on the mouthpiece! You could add some resistance to the buzz with a BERP, or just a finger partially closing off the stem of the mouthpiece to make it feel somewhat more like the horn. Keep in mind, these are just tools in the teaching toolbox!
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by FOSSIL »

harrisonreed wrote: Wed Oct 21, 2020 2:09 am
FOSSIL wrote: Wed Oct 21, 2020 12:33 am

You obviously have a technique that is unsuited to rim or freebuzzing. Not everyone is like that.

Chris
In the interest of friendly discussion about the subject, and with no ill intent whatsoever, I'll proceed cautiously. I've written this before and was pooh-poohed, but looking through the studies of the physics of brass I'm sure that most teachers have got it wrong.

I am sure that there is actually no way to create a buzz or freebuzz without introducing extra resistance into the system
, and if you assume that the resistance created by the instrument is the basic state, the "faked" resistance to buzz on stuff that isn't the whole instrument is unhelpful and damaging. Here is why:

1. The sound produced by a brass instrument is a result of the air inside a tube being forced into a sympathetic vibration within that tube. There is a series of points of equilibrium (the harmonic overtone series) where the air column will "slot" and a clear note is produced. So you can change how much you agitate or vibrate or "energize" that air in the tube, but mostly whatever you do will sound bad unless you've hit these "slots" where everything is in equilibrium. Take the resistance (the horn) away, and the lips stop vibrating. Add the horn back on and the pitch starts again. The sound is (or at least should be) from all of the air in the tube vibrating, and not just the sound of the lips in the mouthpiece.

2. In a tube that doesn't change length, like a natural horn, or baroque trumpet, or ... a mouthpiece... the further out of pitch you try to force the sound from these points on the harmonic series, the worse it sounds. This is why trying to lip pitches down in a warm-up (no idea why teachers do that) sounds bad, and the best teachers are always telling their students to play exactly in the center of the pitch, and move the slide to tune. Most students don't know what that means. What they are really saying is to "fix" the length of the tubing first, and to have the lip playing the pitch that is exactly in the center of the point of equilibrium on that fixed length of tubing to get the best sound.

3. Based on the above, the pitch and harmonic series is completely based on the length of the tube, and the level and quality of energy that gets it vibrating. A trombone is like a 9-12 foot tube, and at its full length you can feel that the resistance of the whole system is different. The blow is different in 7th position. How you reach equilibrium and make a beautiful sound in 7th position is very different from 1st position. I think everyone can agree with this. So... What is the length of a mouthpiece? 3 inches? I do not think any human being is capable of playing the actual points of equilibrium on a three inch pipe, and finding the harmonic series. There is hardly any air in it to get vibrating, so it has almost no resistance at all. You would have to move your entire lungs worth of air through the mouthpiece in about one second, and the root of the harmonic series would be like Bb6. So straight away, everything you buzz on a mouthpiece is by its very nature a forced false tone, octaves out of pitch from the harmonic series of the pipe it's buzzed on. Also, just like false tones on the trombone, you must compensate for being so far out of the harmonic series by creating a false point of resistance. It could be that you push your lips together harder than you would of you were playing a trombone, or you put your finger over the hole of the shank, or you REALLY clamp your lips together for free buzzing. But none of that should be happening when you are playing your trombone.

4. If you know #1 above is true, which I think no one can really argue with, and if you know #2 is true, which anyone who has tried to lip false tones or lip a note down a half step can probably agree with, then #3 should logically follow. Mouthpiece buzzing is 100% the practice of false tones on a 3in instrument octaves below its unplayable harmonic series in a way that is completely different to playing the trombone, many hundreds of times different from the difference between the feel of 1st position and 7th. You can try the test if you don't believe it, where you buzz your best middle F and then slowly slide the buzzing mouthpiece into the leadpipe -- it will sound horrible. I have seen one video where a really outstanding player goes from free rim to mouthpiece to horn to try and disprove it, and you can see where he changes his setup for each change.

So, again, that's my friendly and hopefully constructive take on it. There are MANY players who are a thousand times better than me who buzz every day, but I think they'd be 1200 times better than me if they stopped spending time buzzing and unlearning buzzing every time they practiced. The only counterargument that is usually proposed is "no, it actually helps" ... which isn't helpful to anyone. I haven't seen anyone show how it helps. I would love to see something showing what it does to help players improve, and how it doesn't teach them to play with tighter lips. If a teacher teaches "play dead center on the pitch, and if you're out of tune a bit, move the slide but stay centered on it as it changes", I don't know how they can also teach "buzz octaves out of pitch, and keep changing pitches that you can't center on, because the mouthpiece is one length only"
Well Harrison, thanks for that detailed exposition of your theory. If what you say was correct in every respect, I would be nonplussed at my ability to buzz a note with my lips and bring the instrument to my face, continuing to buzz and continuing the sound until it becomes a normal note on the instrument of good quality...I can also do this by playing a note and removing the instrument whilst maintaining lip vibration.
Vibration is a perception of rapid changes in air pressure reaching our aural system which is recognized as sound by our brains. On a brass instrument, this vibration or variation of air pressure is created by air passing the lips and being modified by the rapid opening and closing of the lips, caused by muscular resistance to that air column at the lips. Pitch is controlled by muscular contraction at the lips together with variations in the presurisation of the air within the lungs so as to allow air to pass through the lips in such a way as to allow continued vibration.
The vibration thus created is in physical terms massive in comparison to the static air within the instrument and causes the air within the instrument to vibrate. If that vibration is not of the harmonic series favoured by the tube length, it cancels itself and no pure note results but if the vibration is a pitch favoured by the tube, a standing wave is created as the construction of a brass instrument traps most of the energy put into it in order to form a standing wave with only a small part of the input energy escaping the horn function barrier into the air at the bell end.
My lips are the major controller in the system and I can therefore act as I described at the start. Lip buzzing is not bad, it does not lead to poor tonal quality, but it's not for everyone.

Chris
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by robcat2075 »

FOSSIL wrote: Tue Oct 20, 2020 9:02 am
robcat2075 wrote: Tue Oct 20, 2020 8:47 am This reminds me how much of music pedagogy is just traditions, slogans and anecdotes...

[yada yada yada...]
If that is really all teaching is about, nobody in their right mind would take a lesson.

Chris
If they knew.

But what seven-year-old or teenager or college student, the vast majority of music-lesson-takers, has enough experience to discern this?

They haven't had ten cello teachers by the time they get out of college, enough to make obvious how inconsistent the trade is. They've have had maybe two or three.

They might be five or six years in before they even get to teacher #2

And they are at the age where people mostly do what they are told and accept guidance from authority as valid.
>>Robert Holmén<<

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See my Spacepod movie
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by BGuttman »

My take on buzzing is based on periods of activity playing and long lull periods. If I am actively playing and practicing then buzzing for a period actually helps. If I am not playing much, buzzing is of no help at all.

FWIW, I found that when I am out of shape I need to add resistance (finger on end) to make buzzing work. When I am in shape I don't need the finger. I use buzzing as a gauge of how back in shape I am.

But everybody is different.

I also like Robcat's thoughts.
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by Pre59 »

Harrison,

I can understand people being sceptical about techniques that they haven't needed or been able to apply correctly. But somehow to flatly deny other peoples lived experiences, is to assume that we all started from the same point, that is, with a vanilla embouchure. If you do have a natural embouchure, and go through a playing career with no problems, well great.
I guess that you're young, and are enjoying you time in a service band, and may be a tidy player. But don't make the mistake at this early stage of believing that your chops will remain the same, because when changes happen, as they surely will, and you wish to continue at a high level, you'll have to discover in yourself a more open mind that you currently possess.

Bob.
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by FOSSIL »

robcat2075 wrote: Wed Oct 21, 2020 11:38 am
FOSSIL wrote: Tue Oct 20, 2020 9:02 am
If that is really all teaching is about, nobody in their right mind would take a lesson.

Chris
If they knew.

But what seven-year-old or teenager or college student, the vast majority of music-lesson-takers, has enough experience to discern this?

They haven't had ten cello teachers by the time they get out of college, enough to make obvious how inconsistent the trade is. They've have had maybe two or three.

They might be five or six years in before they even get to teacher #2

And they are at the age where people mostly do what they are told and accept guidance from authority as valid.
Teachers....yup, it's a crapshoot.

Chris
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by Slidemo »

I keep a copy of my regular large bore mouthpiece and a Warburton "Buzzard" in my car. I buzz Rochut melodies, Hymn tunes, Xmas tunes, along with the radio etc etc..... Such a good use of dead time for me and haven't noticed any negative effects. I wouldn't say it was a substitute for practice but certainly a great addition.
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by baileyman »

FOSSIL wrote: Wed Oct 21, 2020 10:52 am ...
... Pitch is controlled by muscular contraction at the lips together with variations in the presurisation of the air within the lungs so as to allow air to pass through the lips in such a way as to allow continued vibration.
...
My lips are the major controller in the system and I can therefore act as I described at the start. Lip buzzing is not bad, it does not lead to poor tonal quality, but it's not for everyone.

Chris
This is what I used to think. But now I find I can buzz a note with the tongue in an "ee" position, then gliss the tongue to an "ah", and the pitch will follow down with what feels to me like no change in lips. And reverse.

Then I find I can gliss the tongue in the same way, but maintain the pitch. I call this a "stationary gliss". In this case I feel a pretty powerful lip contraction counteracting the tongue movement.

I find this phenomenon endlessly fascinating. It makes for many exercise variations.
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by harrisonreed »

FOSSIL wrote: Wed Oct 21, 2020 10:52 am Well Harrison, thanks for that detailed exposition of your theory. If what you say was correct in every respect, I would be nonplussed at my ability to buzz a note with my lips and bring the instrument to my face, continuing to buzz and continuing the sound until it becomes a normal note on the instrument of good quality...I can also do this by playing a note and removing the instrument whilst maintaining lip vibration.
Vibration is a perception of rapid changes in air pressure reaching our aural system which is recognized as sound by our brains. On a brass instrument, this vibration or variation of air pressure is created by air passing the lips and being modified by the rapid opening and closing of the lips, caused by muscular resistance to that air column at the lips. Pitch is controlled by muscular contraction at the lips together with variations in the presurisation of the air within the lungs so as to allow air to pass through the lips in such a way as to allow continued vibration.
The vibration thus created is in physical terms massive in comparison to the static air within the instrument and causes the air within the instrument to vibrate. If that vibration is not of the harmonic series favoured by the tube length, it cancels itself and no pure note results but if the vibration is a pitch favoured by the tube, a standing wave is created as the construction of a brass instrument traps most of the energy put into it in order to form a standing wave with only a small part of the input energy escaping the horn function barrier into the air at the bell end.

My lips are the major controller in the system and I can therefore act as I described at the start. Lip buzzing is not bad, it does not lead to poor tonal quality, but it's not for everyone.

Chris
Chris, it looks like we are in agreement with what is going on inside the horn and with the chops. That is definitely what I was trying to say, in my own clumsy way.

But, again I would say that your lips really aren't what controls that system -- they are only vibrating as a result of the speed and direction of the air passing through them, and how that air meets the static/already-vibrating air inside the horn. That second bit, of how it interacts with what's already in the horn, is why we get obsessed over finding the right horn, crook, leadpipe, etc. But anyways, the lips don't do or control anything. The air does, as you push it out. The tongue does, as it shapes the direction of that air, and your corners do as it shapes the aperture of the lips.

My hang up is that when you take the horn away, you take that interaction away as well. All the stuff we obsess over gear wise, which we know is important because of how it affects what we need to do with our input, is now gone. So the corners, aperture, tongue etc must compensate to keep the lips buzzing. I think that compensation takes the form of overly tight corners and worse, a tight body core, but ... in the end I guess it doesn't matter. You can be the best of the best and get there while buzzing every day, so like you say it probably isn't detrimental.

I'm pretty much tapped out on my thoughts for this. I would be very interested in seeing videos of pro-buzzing people demonstrating going from free buzzing to mouthpiece buzzing to horn playing with a close-up view of their chops. Those sorts of things are really informative.
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by harrisonreed »

Pre59 wrote: Wed Oct 21, 2020 11:51 am Harrison,

I can understand people being sceptical about techniques that they haven't needed or been able to apply correctly. But somehow to flatly deny other peoples lived experiences, is to assume that we all started from the same point, that is, with a vanilla embouchure. If you do have a natural embouchure, and go through a playing career with no problems, well great.
I guess that you're young, and are enjoying you time in a service band, and may be a tidy player. But don't make the mistake at this early stage of believing that your chops will remain the same, because when changes happen, as they surely will, and you wish to continue at a high level, you'll have to discover in yourself a more open mind that you currently possess.

Bob.
Some would call me young, but I'm definitely not as young as I'd like to be. I will say that I think my chops already have hit and passed "the big change", but it was a change in my own head and a slight mouthpiece size change. I used to buzz because my teachers told me to buzz. I stopped the day my lessons stopped, so my chop change had nothing to do with buzzing. I've been playing trombone for 22 years now. About 6 years ago, when I was 27, I was getting really bad jaw pain and was just too tense. I was trying to play things that were too difficult, and using a bad approach. All kinds of issues related to mouthpiece size. Ever since I fixed that mouthpiece issue which helped me fix my approach, 6 years ago now, I've felt that playing brass is something I could continue doing and improving at for another forty years or so before I'll have problems. It's been years since I've had jaw pain or worried about range or endurance. I chalk that all up to being very relaxed and letting the horn do it's job. So I'll 100% reject any practice that I feel encourages more tension than is needed to do my job throughout the day.

I don't know what he says about buzzing other than "it is really different from what happens when we play" and "the lips vibrating comes from the interaction of the air inside you hitting the atmosphere inside the trombone" ("unlocking the trombone code", Ian Bousfield) but Ian Bousfield has written a lot about his approach and it helped me out tremendously.

(I don't think "tension free" playing is a thing, fwiw)
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by Pre59 »

Harrison, you wrote a good post. Just to reiterate, my issue is with writing off of concepts that have worked for me and others. Rather than stating a view, you could maybe ask about experiences of others, there's more to be gleaned that way. Why not let people make up their own minds?
You've had your embouchure issues along the way as have I. The big difference is that buzzing and buzzing aids have helped me in a tangible ways, decades after I really needed that improvement. Like when I was playing four, two hour "on the face" shows a day for ten weeks at a time, without a day off, in tropical conditions. Ugh..

It's laudable to want to save people from having to suffer the kind of difficulties that you had, but making embouchure changes is always going to be a bit of a gamble, it sounds like your teachers didn't do you any favours, neither did mine, but that how it was then..

Isn't tension all in the mind?

Bob.
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by Basbasun »

Freebuzzing does need more lip power than mpc buzzing. Mpc buzzing does need more lip power than playing the horn. When connect the buzz with playing with the horn you do dadept to the horn. All of it can be done with good airflow, and bad airflow, and to much lip compression. So it can be good or bad.
Lot of pro players buzz, lots of pro player don´t buzz. If you don´t know what to do, why not just test to buzz, or not to buzz if you are a buzzer? In the end it is up to you to decide.
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by FOSSIL »

Could be Harrison means 'ten shun !!!!

Chris
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by harrisonreed »

FOSSIL wrote: Thu Oct 22, 2020 4:59 am Could be Harrison means 'ten shun !!!!

Chris
That one definitively IS all in the mind!
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by Pre59 »

harrisonreed wrote: Thu Oct 22, 2020 5:20 am
FOSSIL wrote: Thu Oct 22, 2020 4:59 am Could be Harrison means 'ten shun !!!!

Chris
That one definitively IS all in the mind!
I've had 5 years 228 days worth of that as well, according to my discharge book..

Bob.
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by StevenHolloway »

I see buzzing like medicine. The difference between medicine and poison is the dose. It’s also no coincidence that all of the players I want to sound like buzz the mouthpiece.
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Re: mouthpiece buzzing Yes or No

Post by timothy42b »

baileyman wrote: Wed Oct 21, 2020 2:54 pm
This is what I used to think. But now I find I can buzz a note with the tongue in an "ee" position, then gliss the tongue to an "ah", and the pitch will follow down with what feels to me like no change in lips. And reverse.

Then I find I can gliss the tongue in the same way, but maintain the pitch. I call this a "stationary gliss". In this case I feel a pretty powerful lip contraction counteracting the tongue movement.

I find this phenomenon endlessly fascinating. It makes for many exercise variations.
And, you can tongue gliss in one direction and lip gliss in the other, and maintain a steady tone.

(just like you can slide vibrato and exactly cancel it with lip vibrato. I don't know of any reason you'd want to but it seems perfectly possible.)

Seriously, what range is your tongue gliss workable in, or easy in?
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