Mouthpiece Placement - Reinhardt Approach
Posted: Sat May 18, 2024 3:15 pm
Hi everyone,
To the following question, I'm interested in a response which is Reinhardt oriented.
The context:
I played trombone/euphonium for about 10 years. In the last period of this approximately 10 years, I tried to move my mouthpiece up on my mouth, because it seemed to me I place it too low. I thought it so because of some opinions. Not because I had register problems.
Then, I took an almost total break for about 14 years. During this years, there where short periods when it happened that I played the trombone, but, it was nothing significant. In general there were years when I didn't touch the trombone during this period of 14 years.
Starting about one month ago, I decided to retake the trombone (I'm 38 now). I would say that my register is OK (in accordance with the time which I spend to "recover" on trombone), but there is a problem: I''m not sure how to place my mouthpiece. I'll explain you below.
1. I'm a downstream player. And I'm a III B according to Reinhardt classification (I have to pull down to ascend). I have read the Encyclopedia of Pivot System. I "diagnosed" myself on this - living in Romania, don't know of any Reinhardt oriented tutor here - but I'm pretty sure I'm right on this.
2. If I place my mouthpiece about 60% upper lip (where it feels most comfortable at first), after some playing it has the tendency to slide downward. If I place it about 50% upper lip (maybe even less a bit), It is pretty OK, but there are 2 issues: the first is is that it feels to me that it is a bit too low, and the second is that it is a bit too low. I would argue that it is too low ( a bit less than 50% on upper lip). And this is not logical for a downstream.
N.B. I don't have register issues in both this positions, but the first one (60% upper lip) slides down when trying to play on high range.
What do you think can the problem be here? I'm not pleased with the second option (a bit less than 50% on upper lip) because I think the low register is a bit unstable because of this. But maybe it is a bit too early to decide on this?
Thanks,
Andrei M.
To the following question, I'm interested in a response which is Reinhardt oriented.
The context:
I played trombone/euphonium for about 10 years. In the last period of this approximately 10 years, I tried to move my mouthpiece up on my mouth, because it seemed to me I place it too low. I thought it so because of some opinions. Not because I had register problems.
Then, I took an almost total break for about 14 years. During this years, there where short periods when it happened that I played the trombone, but, it was nothing significant. In general there were years when I didn't touch the trombone during this period of 14 years.
Starting about one month ago, I decided to retake the trombone (I'm 38 now). I would say that my register is OK (in accordance with the time which I spend to "recover" on trombone), but there is a problem: I''m not sure how to place my mouthpiece. I'll explain you below.
1. I'm a downstream player. And I'm a III B according to Reinhardt classification (I have to pull down to ascend). I have read the Encyclopedia of Pivot System. I "diagnosed" myself on this - living in Romania, don't know of any Reinhardt oriented tutor here - but I'm pretty sure I'm right on this.
2. If I place my mouthpiece about 60% upper lip (where it feels most comfortable at first), after some playing it has the tendency to slide downward. If I place it about 50% upper lip (maybe even less a bit), It is pretty OK, but there are 2 issues: the first is is that it feels to me that it is a bit too low, and the second is that it is a bit too low. I would argue that it is too low ( a bit less than 50% on upper lip). And this is not logical for a downstream.
N.B. I don't have register issues in both this positions, but the first one (60% upper lip) slides down when trying to play on high range.
What do you think can the problem be here? I'm not pleased with the second option (a bit less than 50% on upper lip) because I think the low register is a bit unstable because of this. But maybe it is a bit too early to decide on this?
Thanks,
Andrei M.