Reinhardt Newbie Reflections
Posted: Tue Mar 10, 2026 12:25 pm
I’m not sure there will be a ton to discuss from this post but allow me to think out loud for a paragraph or two.
After having adopted Reinhardt based routines as the core of my practice lately I’ve come to see a few things as essential ingredients to their usefulness even disregarding embouchure type or pivot pattern.
- an emphasis on rest and not over stressing the embouchure
- the clarity and emphasis on mundane stuff: definitely a wet embouchure, flush the horn daily, have a clean mouth and mouthpiece
- a set of exercises that very effectively cover all the bases of playing save for rhythmic figures
- the idea of practicing from a centre point and expanding up and down from there.
There is a downside to the approach. To do the stuff takes a lot of time. It’s efficient time. There is more benefit to an hour of Reinhardt studies than an hour of etude playing in terms of honing the tools needed to play any music. It’s just that it can feel a but monastic doing something like a “track routine” for 10 or 15 minutes. But the entire ethos, as far as I’ve felt it, is more of a scientific or athletic idea than an artistic one. The player needs to have everything working to be able to approach music I suppose.
However, so far I am finding that doing the stuff is leading to my body responding much more assuredly to my musical ideas when it is time to play,
After having adopted Reinhardt based routines as the core of my practice lately I’ve come to see a few things as essential ingredients to their usefulness even disregarding embouchure type or pivot pattern.
- an emphasis on rest and not over stressing the embouchure
- the clarity and emphasis on mundane stuff: definitely a wet embouchure, flush the horn daily, have a clean mouth and mouthpiece
- a set of exercises that very effectively cover all the bases of playing save for rhythmic figures
- the idea of practicing from a centre point and expanding up and down from there.
There is a downside to the approach. To do the stuff takes a lot of time. It’s efficient time. There is more benefit to an hour of Reinhardt studies than an hour of etude playing in terms of honing the tools needed to play any music. It’s just that it can feel a but monastic doing something like a “track routine” for 10 or 15 minutes. But the entire ethos, as far as I’ve felt it, is more of a scientific or athletic idea than an artistic one. The player needs to have everything working to be able to approach music I suppose.
However, so far I am finding that doing the stuff is leading to my body responding much more assuredly to my musical ideas when it is time to play,