pBone in teaching

How and what to teach and learn.
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Savio
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pBone in teaching

Post by Savio »

Have any of you experience how to use pBone in teaching? I wonder to start using it as a beginner instrument. For small children.

Leif
imsevimse
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Re: pBone in teaching

Post by imsevimse »

Many music schools in Sweden use them in education. I can not see a problem with that. They are quite allright to play and the plastic slides work better than many of the used horns in metal that gets beaten up pretty fast. They are both cheap to buy and easy to hold. Unless you step on the horn it will hold together and if a child drops the slide it will probably not break. They also look cool in different colours.
If someone wants to try you could just hand it over with no worries about getting it back as a pile of garbage. You can also carry the horn in a plastic bag without making a fool of yourself.

/Tom
lauriet
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Re: pBone in teaching

Post by lauriet »

In my opinion, this is the ONLY use for a plastic trombone.
Ted
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Re: pBone in teaching

Post by Ted »

Here we use them also as beginner instruments. And in the Netherlands we have Mr. pBone who teaches entire schools at once! Image

kr,
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dershem
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Re: pBone in teaching

Post by dershem »

PBones can play quieter. They weigh less, so younger players can hold them with less stress. They are ... durable, so big mistakes are less traumatic.
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Burgerbob
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Re: pBone in teaching

Post by Burgerbob »

I started my student on one. It's a lot more fun to play trombone when you can hold it up.
Aidan Ritchie, LA area player and teacher
mmitchell
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Re: pBone in teaching

Post by mmitchell »

I can see a pbone being a great learning instrument....the Trombone is the MOST quit band instrument, mostly because compared to other instruments available to learn when you are 9 or 10ish they are heavy, large, and frankly most kids are too small to play them!
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BGuttman
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Re: pBone in teaching

Post by BGuttman »

If a kid is too small to play a brass trombone he is too small to play a pBone. Same size. There is a reason most kids start on a valved brass instrument.

The pBone is light, the bright colors are attractive, and they are resistant to damage more than brass trombones.

BUT

1. They are harder to play and definitely harder to play LOUD. Jiggs Whigham could make a garden hose sound good, but not so most kids.
2. As received the slide action is pretty bad and getting it acceptable requires quite a bit of work.

The pBone is better than a toy, but may not be the ideal learning tool.
Bruce Guttman
Merrimack Valley Philharmonic Orchestra
"Almost Professional"
ronnies
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Re: pBone in teaching

Post by ronnies »

BGuttman wrote: Fri Jul 26, 2019 10:18 am If a kid is too small to play a brass trombone he is too small to play a pBone. Same size. There is a reason most kids start on a valved brass instrument.
Unless it's a pBone mini. My son has one and they are quite fun though it plays very flat with my Wick 5BS. :-)

Ronnie
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JohnL
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Re: pBone in teaching

Post by JohnL »

BGuttman wrote: Fri Jul 26, 2019 10:18 amAs received the slide action is pretty bad and getting it acceptable requires quite a bit of work.
Granted, but once you do get the slide working acceptably well, it's reasonably easy to keep it that way. The pBone shrugs of random bumps and thumps that would seriously mess up a brass slide. Pretty much any insult either does no damage at all or breaks it completely - there's no middle ground.
lauriet
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Re: pBone in teaching

Post by lauriet »

How do you get the working properly ?
Redthunder
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Re: pBone in teaching

Post by Redthunder »

lauriet wrote: Fri Jul 26, 2019 11:27 pm How do you get the working properly ?
Use it a lot, it will break itself in as the brass stockings wear down the inside of the outer slide tubes until it moves smoothly.
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BGuttman
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Re: pBone in teaching

Post by BGuttman »

Redthunder wrote: Sat Jul 27, 2019 9:43 am
lauriet wrote: Fri Jul 26, 2019 11:27 pm How do you get the working properly ?
Use it a lot, it will break itself in as the brass stockings wear down the inside of the outer slide tubes until it moves smoothly.
We actually had another topic about this. You might want to look for other pBoe threads.

One suggestion was to polish the brass stockings with fine steel wool (like 0000) to take off the burrs at the edges.
Bruce Guttman
Merrimack Valley Philharmonic Orchestra
"Almost Professional"
JETbone
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Re: pBone in teaching

Post by JETbone »

I've used the pBone mini and the pBuzz to introduce concepts to children too young to make a serious practice commitment. Occasionally a parent will bring in their child who saw a instrument presentation at school (preschool or elementary) for private lessons. (After all there aren't any keys. How hard could it be? 😄). I find myself trying to walk the line of encouragement to keep them excited about the wonder of the "slide-job" (as my former mechanic called it) and realistic expectations about the necessary practice in order to get to the real fun. I usually suggest one or both pInstruments depending on ability and insist parents participate to facilitate good basic technique.

My personal pBone mini gets "played" by my own young kids to sometimes "accompany" my practice.
lauriet
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Re: pBone in teaching

Post by lauriet »

I relented and bought one to take on holiday for a month. I also bought a shush mute. The slide is sooooo tight, I have not played it much at all. I will sell it off when I return home.
I can only see it being any use for the absolute beginner.
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torobone
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Re: pBone in teaching

Post by torobone »

There is a lot of variance in the quality of pBones. Try before you buy.
When they first came out, I went to my local store, looking for a blue one on which to play the blues. There was literally a pBone pile in the corner. The best playing one was red, so that's what I bought.
Martin Hubel
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Symphony tenors: 1972 Bach 42B, Yamaha 882 GOR (on loan)
Basses: 2011 Yamaha 830 Xeno, 1942 NY Bach 50B
Alto: 1980 Bach 39
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