Doubling on instruments
Doubling on instruments
16:24 on Wednesday, June 18, 2008
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Kito (39 points)
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Hey there! I am principally a flautist, I have been a non-serious student for six years and a serious one for two. Not to sound egotistical, I have quickly grown to be the best in my band, and I know that the flute is something I was born to do and something that may one day be my profession -- or at the very least, a consistent hobby.
However, I have had an itching lately to learn something new. I want to experiment with jazz, so after months of goading and cajoling I have convinced my band director into loaning me a tenor saxophone for the summer so that I can join a local jazz ensemble to have something to do until school starts again in September and maybe join our school jazz band to have some silly fun in my last year of high school. The sax is great, even though I have yet to produce a real, lasting sound, and I am having a lot of fun with it. This will certainly make for an interesting endeavour.
Before I start taking this seriously, though (I have to admit, for the past few days I've mostly been having a blast just trying to figure out fingerings and notes, as I'm teaching myself), I have a few questions for all of you in fluteland. I have heard that there can be some lasting, adverse affects from doubling. Brass instruments especially ruin the flute embouchure, according to my band director, which dissuaded me from learning the mellophone to march DCI with my friend next summer. I figured that doubling on another woodwind wouldn't be too troublesome, but I want some solid evidence that this shan't hurt me, as I am going to be auditioning for music school this fall and winter and need to keep my lips in pristine shape. In that case, perhaps this isn't the best idea -- but I want to learn, and when I have my mind set on something, it takes a lot to stop me.
If it isn't too awful of an idea, I was wondering if you could pass along any tips you have; what books to learn out of, what sort of technique you find helps you make sound on the reed (it's so much different than the flute!), how you got a good sound out of it, good sites, et cetera.
Thanks guys, you haven't let me down yet and I hope you'll give me some good advice!
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Re: Doubling on instruments
19:17 on Wednesday, June 18, 2008
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Re: Doubling on instruments
07:51 on Thursday, June 19, 2008
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Re: Doubling on instruments
17:48 on Thursday, June 19, 2008
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Re: Doubling on instruments
07:22 on Sunday, June 22, 2008
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Re: Doubling on instruments
20:04 on Sunday, June 22, 2008
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Re: Doubling on instruments
11:54 on Tuesday, June 24, 2008
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Re: Doubling on instruments
11:59 on Monday, March 16, 2009
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Re: Doubling on instruments
19:28 on Monday, March 16, 2009
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flute_n_bassoon (309 points)
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Posted by flute_n_bassoon
Flute Freak...
you can definately forget an instrument. I had that problem last summer, where I adopted oboe and believed I would not forget flute. However, in reply to the origional post :It (oboe) didn't mess up my embrochure, but the fingerings were so close I completely forgot how to play my flute. Luckily, I was able to learn easily again after dropping oboe, and am better than I was before. However, a word of caution, an instrument with fingerings that do not resemble what you already play is best to double on for the first time (like bassoon), but I wouldn't be concerned about messing up an embrochure unless you're trying to learn picc, alto flute, etc. (I too, learned that lesson the hard way) Then again, I'm no sax player, so I wouldn't rely entirely on my advice. =)
<Added>
Perhaps you can still play everything correctly, Flute Freak, because the fingerings are the same as other instruments you play, or because the fingerings are completely different. If you attempted to learn even more members of the reed family, I am sure you would find yourself stuck.
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Re: Doubling on instruments
20:13 on Monday, March 16, 2009
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arabians207 (259 points)
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I've never played a reed instrument but I think as long as you practice on both you would be fine
And I'd also agree that you can forget an instrument. When we went on vacation last summer, I didn't play flute for maybe 2 weeks.. even that short amount of time had a effect on my playing.. it took at least a week to get my tone back and i had a hard time playing high stuff!
And just because you play a lot of instruments, doesn't mean you are good and play with great tone and everything.. sure I can say I know how to play trumpet.. but I have definitely played one enough to say I am any good at it.
But I still say if you practice enough on each/all instruments you could learn to play them very well
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Re: Doubling on instruments
15:56 on Tuesday, March 17, 2009
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Re: Doubling on instruments
23:31 on Tuesday, March 17, 2009
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Re: Doubling on instruments
09:12 on Wednesday, March 18, 2009
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Re: Doubling on instruments
15:47 on Friday, March 20, 2009
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Re: Doubling on instruments
19:46 on Friday, March 20, 2009
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