Summer Practice, 2002: by Chris Gekker
Summer Practice, 2002: by Chris Gekker
Summer Practice, 2002: by Chris Gekker
By Chris Gekker
Summer is a good time to reconnect with our most basic practice. Practicing
the basics can be interpreted many different ways - here is one approach that
works well. You will need five books:
the Herbert L. Clarke Technical Studies,
the Schlossberg Daily Drills,
the Arban Grand Method,
the Sachse 100 Etudes,
and the Charles Colin Advanced Lip Flexibilities.
Start with the Clarke. These can be done effectively many different ways, but
this time let's do them just as Clarke intended: start each study in the lowest
possible key, very very soft. The idea is to become adept at an extremely
relaxed, economical way of playing. We must have a very secure, efficient
sense of air support, and a pliant, flexible aperture supported by a strong,
stable embouchure. Though we will sometimes ascend to some of our highest
notes, in general our playing should be very "conversational" - a good image
to keep is of a very well tuned car engine, that can idle so quietly that the
driver is not aware that the car is running. For the most part you will be playing
softer than you would normally do in performance, so do not be too concerned
with your tone quality - you are "tuning your engine," connecting with your
instrument on an extremely relaxed level.
Do one study a day. This makes a very nice eight-day cycle, where we hit our
fundamentals every day within the framework of varying demands.
No. 1 - At least eight times in one breath. Whisper soft. Once you are in the
middle register, legato tongue a few of them (four times through when
tonguing). Note: Refer to "Notes on Practicing" for additional details related to
Clarke #1.
No. 2 - Each one twice, at first. Stop where Clarke stops, don't continue into
the high register (this is meant to be an "easy" day). After you are very
comfortable with these drills, go through each one four times: slurred, single
tongue, K tongue, and double tongue - and keep the tempo the same
throughout.
No. 3 - Each one twice. Work in some tonguing after you learn the patterns.
Keep striving to be able to play these softly.
No. 4 - Play using the same approach as No. 3.
No. 5 - On this one we can open up dynamically as we ascend to the highest
notes. Keep as much of it as "conversational" as possible. For now, skip the
scale exercises 99-116.
No. 6 - Play these just as written, so the tongued arpeggios at the end are in
contrast to the slurred material.
No. 7 - Again, work in some tonguing as you get comfortable technically. Stay
as soft as possible. For now, skip the arpeggio exercises 151-169.
No. 8 - Play using the same approach as No. 7.
On your first few cycles, omit the etudes at the end of each study. After the
studies are fairly well learned, start to learn them. I usually tongue the etude
after going through the studies where I use a mixture of slurring and legato
tonguing. Clarke recommends a fair amount of multiple tonguing practice - I
prefer to stick to legato single tonguing, except for the drill on the Second
Study.
Next come the Schlossberg Daily Drills. I like to set up a shorter cycle for
these - here is a good three-day routine. With Schlossberg, we'll use our
metronomes and will try to keep in mind James Stamp's advice, to "think
down when going up, and up when going down." Really listen to your sound
on these, but remember what Arnold Jacobs has taught: do not be obsessed
with how you sound; rather, play to an ideal tonal concept that hopefully you
are continually cultivating internally.
Day 1
No. 9 Quarter = 40 Rest at the end of each line. Play mezzo forte throughout
No. 17 Half = 60 Full sound, very well projected. Marcato, but no short notes
No. 25 Quarter = 120 Fast and light, very soft, single tongue throughout
No. 32 Quarter = 120 Tongue the downbeat of each measure. Dolce, but full
sound
No. 72 Quarter = 80 mp to mf, single tongue throughout, nice and crisp
No. 116 Quarter = 96 Done as one, crisp and clear
No. 117
Day 2
No. 10 Quarter = 40 Follow Schlossberg's dynamics. Rest a bit at the double
bars.
No. 18 Quarter = 80 Legato tongue every note, very soft.
No. 30 Quarter = 60 Very full, well projected, as exciting as possible.
No. 63 Eighth = 120 mf, alternate between slurred and legato tongue
No. 76 Quarter = 60 Very strong, marcato.
No. 93 Quarter = 80 Rest between each one, very full and strong.
No. 118 Quarter = 96 Crisp and clear.
Day 3
No. 13 Quarter = 40 Think "up" as you go "down" - do not telegraph your
slurs.
No. 20 Half = 60 Legato tongue, singing sound.
No. 64 Quarter = 60 mf, alternate between slurred and legato tongue
No. 78 Eighth = 96 Very strong, marcato.
No. 82 Quarter = 80 Rest between each one, very full and strong
No. 99 Quarter = 80 Crisp and well projected.
No. 100 Quarter = 80 Same as No. 99.
No. 119 Quarter = 96 Same dynamic throughout, somewhere between p and
mf, all in one breath.
After you've rested a while, turn to the 14 Characteristic Etudes in the Arban
Grand Method. Aim for one a day - it takes two weeks to get through them.
For the first two cycles through I like to use a practice routine adapted from
Claude Gordon. It will take 20-30 minutes to go through each etude, but they
will mostly be learned in one day. Don't use the metronome a lot on these, just
occasionally after they've been learned, to experience at least some of each
etude at Arban's tempos. The language of this music requires a kind of
flexibility that rules out using a metronome throughout.
Here is the version of Claude Gordon's method. We'll start with No. 1. Play the
last four measures four times. Move four measures further toward the
beginning, and do those four times. Then play the last eight measures to the
end. Go to twelve measures before the end, and do those four measures four
times, followed by the last twelve measures to the end. Keep working to the
beginning of the etude, doing four reps of each four bar segment, followed by
a run to the end of the etude from the section you did your reps with. Take
enough rest throughout so that you stay relatively fresh. As your run-throughs
get longer and longer, insert some short rests if you feel yourself getting tight.
This routine will toughen your mind, and once you get the hang of it you will
never again need a week to learn an etude.
Note that the Clarke Studies cycle every eight days, the Schlossberg every
three days, and Arban every 14 days. So while you are relearning and
reaffirming your fundamentals every day, each day is also different.
If you are involved with a heavy performing schedule, do not try to practice
hard. You can only improve your playing when you have time to recover
properly. I believe that the Clarke studies are very beneficial even when doing
a high volume of rehearsals and concerts, but you may want to save the
Schlossberg and Arban for lighter days. Only experience will teach you, and
we are all different in some ways from each other. But this principle is true for
all of us: improving and getting stronger requires that we all work very hard,
and rest adequately. One without the other does not work.
Assuming that you can practice fairly consistently, after one month you will
have gone through the Clarke studies 3 or 4 times, the Schlossberg drills 9 or
10 times, and the Arban etudes twice or so. At this point I like to make a few
changes.
Keep your Clarke routine the same. It may be hard to imagine, but many
prominent trumpeters have made a point of doing the Clarke studies for years.
Keep in mind the old adage "form follows function" - if, on a daily basis, you
establish a very efficient, relaxed approach to playing the trumpet, you will
eventually become a trumpeter that can, on a daily basis, play the trumpet in a
relaxed, smooth, and expressive manner.
We'll now change our routine a bit. After Clarke, alternate days of Arban and
Sachse 100 Etudes. On your Arban day, keep working on the 14
Characteristic Etudes, one a day. Try this: do the last third or so a couple of
times, the middle third twice, and the same with the first third. Rest at least
five minutes, and try to play all the way through. With Sachse, start with No. 1,
and do it in every transposition you can, including ones that might not be
indicated. After this month of practice, you should be through about 15 of
them. I recommend setting a goal of eventually doing all 100, in every key
possible, which will take about two years. (As a student, I needed more than
three, because I found it very hard to keep working on these when I was
sounding so bad. After I was about halfway through the etudes, I started
seeing real results, and was much more motivated to continue.) Transposition
needs to eventually be as automatic as possible and the trumpeter that relies
on formulas will be easily rattled under pressure. Formulas are necessary to
help us learn how to transpose, but if you are serious you will want to
progress to the point where you do not have to rely on them. The only way to
make transposition nearly automatic is through learning a large volume of
material over a fairly long time, which the Sachse book is made for. Many
other benefits will be evident, if you persist on these etudes in every key
possible. Mix up your approach - one day, start at the lowest key and work up
by half steps. Another day, do the reverse. You can also start in the middle,
and progress in half steps, alternating going up and going down, so you
radiate outward from the middle.
After your etude work, rest awhile. At this point we'll alternate our Schlossberg
work and the Charles Colin Lip Flexibilities. You should by now have a good
command of the Schlossberg exercises, and can start to perform them with
more intensity (wider dynamic contrasts, more variety in styles of articulation).
When these exercises a played really well, they can sound like very dramatic
orchestral excerpts. On alternate days, do this routine from the Charles Colin
book - No. 3, No. 9, No. 21, and pages 35 & 36. If your high D is coming out
with ease, move on to the next level, but stick to about five exercises.
Remember that these are primarily tongue level exercises, and must be
performed with a dynamic, powerful air stream in order to realize the benefits.
Rest at least as long as you play.
The reason we have switched the order is to make our practice routine a bit
more in line with what sport medicine research has taught us about how to
improve and get stronger. Begin by connecting with your body on a relaxed
easy level, then move on to skill practice, and end by working on our power
and strength.
Here are a few other ideas for summer practice:
1) Pick one or two of our most challenging excerpts, and really work toward
mastering them. Two that most trumpeters will have to contend with many
times are the Ballerina's Dance from Petroushka and the Ravel Piano
Concerto. Since they present some of the same problems, this approach will
work well for both. Do 20 reps of either excerpt at a session, like this - 5 times
at Quarter = 96. 5 times at Quarter = 108. 5 times at Quarter = 126 (this will
not really be possible for most players, but hang in there and do your best).
And then 5 times at Quarter = 108-116 (this is a common performance tempo
and will feel relatively easy after what you have just gone through!). If you
devote a month or two to each excerpt this way, you develop the skill and
reflexive memory that will allow you to quickly reclaim these solos whenever
you have to play them in the future.
2) Find a recording of an improvised solo that you really like, and memorize it
- not just temporarily, but so you can play it for anybody, anytime. If your