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Music | All-Star Orchestra
Course: Music | All-Star Orchestra > Unit 4
Lesson 3: Brass- French Horn: Interview and demonstration with principal John Cerminaro
- Trumpet: Interview and demonstration with principal David Bilger
- Trombone: Interview and demonstration with principal Joseph Alessi
- Bass Trombone: Interview and demonstration with Denson Paul Pollard
- Tuba: Interview and demonstration with Chris Olka
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Bass Trombone: Interview and demonstration with Denson Paul Pollard
Created by All Star Orchestra.
Want to join the conversation?
- what is a register and a tamber?(7 votes)
- Register is the highness of the pitch.
Timbre (not tamber) is the quality of the tone.(4 votes)
- Sorry if this sounds ignorant but I really can not tell what the director is doing. People have told me he is coordinating everything but as far as I can see no one is really looking at him. If someone could please clear this up I would be grateful.(3 votes)
- Another thing that most musicians do is raising their stand so that when they look at their music they can see the conductor out of the corner of their eye and can watch them even when looking at the music.(4 votes)
- Does anyone know what the instrument atis? It looks like it uses a double reed and looks similar to the bassoon so I'm guessing it's part of the bassoon family 3:51(2 votes)
- You are indeed correct in that it is part of the bassoon family! The instrument atis a contrabassoon. 3:51(3 votes)
- J.J. Johnson Quintet 1955 ~ Viscosity
...is this considered smooth jazz?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yX3yGeaKI1I(2 votes)- No it's typically be-bop music, despite of some "cool jazz" colors in it (make me think of Gerry Mulligan/Chet Baker songs like "Line for Lyons", but nothing irrelevant, it's the 50's sound).
Be-bop, because of these typical items :
- the theme is played both by sax and trombone, at the same octave (as in "Donna Lee", sax/trumpet, and plenty of great be-bop tunes)
- drums play a "chabada" swing style all along, with few breaks
- introduction, theme and improvisations contains typically be-bop licks and language
- the title, "Viscosity", which is abstract, is a sign of be-bop influence (many greats be-bop tunes had abstract titles, like "Ornithology", "Anthropology"...)
- J.J. Johnson was a black man, and "smooth" (rather "cool") jazz was mostly the white thing
a little advice : get "Free Jazz/black Power", which is a very good book on jazz history and styles. But I don't know if it's been translated in english (I'm a french guy, and it's a french book).
Hope I helped you answering this(3 votes)
- what is he saying atis he saying mesh or what I'm trying to write about the video 😦 1:46(2 votes)
- I'm sorry but I'm a little confused with your question.(2 votes)
- Does anyone know what the instrument atis? It looks like it uses a double reed and looks similar to the bassoon so I'm guessing it's part of the bassoon family. 3:50(2 votes)
- It is a contrabassoon, which is indeed in the same family. It sounds lower (an octave lower, to be precise) than the bassoon.(2 votes)
- At, is that high for a trumpet? 2:40(2 votes)
- Why are the vales so important?(2 votes)
- how do you tell the difference between the trombone and the bass trombone?(2 votes)
Video transcript
(lively dramatic orchestral music) - This is the bass trombone. It's the instrument that plays low in the trombone instrument family. You'll observe here that the bass trombone has lots of tubing. It has lots of extra tubing. And that allows the
instrument to play lower. And to be flexible in that register. You'll also notice that the
bass trombone mouth piece is quite large, that helps playing low. And the bell is larger than
the alto or the tenor trombone, which allows it to play lower easier. The bass trombone and the tuba, basically can play in the same range. Their timbres are just slightly different. The tuba timbre is quite
large and quite wide. The bass trombone timbre
is a little more pointed, but we play in the same range. (rapid dramatic orchestral music) - This instrument has two valves. And basically it allows you
to use the inner positions with the valve mashed down, rather than going all the way out. So it's a way of adding
tubing to the instrument without moving the slide. For instance, a low F
is in sixth position. (low horn sound) Or I can mash down on this first valve and play it in first position. (low horn sound) So it just gives you more options for playing notes in the low register. The lowest note on this
instrument on this instrument is a pedal B natural. Which is quite low. And for that note I have to
mash down both of my valves. And put the slide out
as far as it will go. (low reverberating horn sound) When you play low notes
on the bass trombone and the slide is all the way out, you're getting close the end of the slide. And it's very easy for the
slide to come off the end. And I have to be kind
of careful about that. (strong lively orchestral music) Most trombone players
begin playing the trombone on a tenor trombone. And I would dare to
say that probably 99.9% of the professional
trombone players out there started in band, usually
around the age of 10, fifth grade in America. And we start on the tenor trombone. And that's how I began. And I showed up in fifth grade one day, and they had sign-ups for band. And so I thought, hmm. That sounds kind of fun, so I signed up and we went to this big
room and our band director demonstrated each one of the instruments. And I was immediately
taken with the one thing that separates the trombone from all of the other
instruments which is the slide. The minute the band director went. (high to low to high horn sounds) He had me and that's why
I chose the trombone. (soaring orchestral music) I started playing when I was 10. And in the beginning,
the sounds weren't great. And I wanted to sound
great, so I practiced a lot. And I wasn't really forced to practice. I loved the sound of this instrument and I really enjoyed doing it. And as a result of that, I did it a lot. You know, often times when my friends were out playing football and baseball, I would be in playing scales. Playing my major scales,
practicing my scales. And eventually, you
know, after a year or two of steady daily practice,
my sound improved. I started to be able to play
in tune a little better. And my facility on the instrument, my slide technique got better and better. And it actually started getting fun, after lots of daily consistent practice. (strong quick driving orchestral music) When I was thirteen years old and entering as a
freshmen into high school. We started to have to kind of think about what we were going to major in in college. And I started thinking
about what I am going to do? What am I going to study in college? And music was really the only
thing, I really wanted to do. And so all through high
school I was preparing myself to be a music education major. And pursue the trombone. You know, the trombone
is a fun instrument. It's a social instrument. It's not like piano,
where you sit in a room by yourself and practice. You know, the trombone is an instrument, a lot of the time when
you're playing the trombone it's with other kids. And it's fun from the very beginning. You're in, it's like sports
for non sports people. In a way, you're in a group,
you're playing together. You have to cooperate, you have to listen. So it's fun from the very beginning. And depending on how much
a young person practices. If you begin at the age of
10, it doesn't take very long before you're producing
a pretty good sound. If you're practicing daily
and you have good technique. (dramatic uplifting
soaring orchestral music)