Alex Kaminsky, Author at MakeMusic https://www.makemusic.com/blog/author/akaminsky/ Wed, 05 Apr 2023 15:59:42 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.3 https://wpmedia.makemusic.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/cropped-MakeMusic_Icon_1024%402x.png?w=32 Alex Kaminsky, Author at MakeMusic https://www.makemusic.com/blog/author/akaminsky/ 32 32 210544250 Power Up! Improving Ensemble Sound https://www.makemusic.com/blog/power-up-improving-ensemble-sound/ Tue, 27 Sep 2022 17:37:53 +0000 https://www.makemusic.com/?p=38347 The sound of any ensemble is its first impression on the listener; therefore, this should be the priority. There are […]

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The sound of any ensemble is its first impression on the listener; therefore, this should be the priority. There are 3 elements of the band sound: Breathing, Tone, and Intonation. Without great tone and intonation, an ensemble will not be able to achieve a rich and transparent sonority. This means that sound fundamentals (pun intended) are the key to a great band sound. Everything students need to know about creating a great band sonority is learned during “ensembleship” time, otherwise known as the ensemble warm-up.

Element #1: Breathing

Correct breathing must be taught and practiced. Band is probably the only class where students have to be intentional about breathing. We need to guide our students to breathe deeply and correctly continually so that it becomes second nature to them. Why do breathing? Here are 4 reasons:

  1. Helps maximize lung capacity, thereby increasing airflow.
  2. More air means more vibration, thereby, more sound (sound = air + vibration).
  3. Helps remove tension, which is tone’s worst enemy.
  4. Creates a focused and quiet environment in which to make music. (classroom management by-product!).

Encourage students to think about breathing down to the bottom of their stomach and/or their chair. Try having them inhale whispering the word “how” and exhale whispering the word “too,” or try the exercise below:

breathing exercise

Element #2: Tone

Tone is the medium by which we communicate; GREAT tone is how we communicate effectively. Tone drives, otherwise known as long tones, are the best way to have students focus on and develop optimum characteristic tone quality. Using a SING – BUZZ – PLAY approach, have the students default to a 2-count inhale from Element #1, but have them sustain for 12 counts at mm=96. Gradually, slow down the tempo for longer sustains. You can vary the number of counts on the exhale, as well.

SING—Have students sing on a unified vowel such as “dAH,” “dOH,” or “dOO.” You might try humming first: Mmm… MAW… dAH.

BUZZ—While brass players buzz a note, have woodwinds play it. When the brass players are buzzing rather than playing, it allows woodwinds to hear themselves a little more easily, and for the brass players, it helps focus their embouchures and increase vibration, which clears up the tone quality.

PLAY—The approach to tone drives should be prioritized as follows: BBI = Balance, Blend, Intonation

  • Priority 1: Balance = Volume (translates to air speed)
  • Priority 2: Blend = Characteristic Tone Quality—“Describe your tone quality at all times!”
  • Priority 3: Intonation = Most effective after priority 1 and 2 are achieved

Element #3: InTONEation

Students must be taught how to listen. What does “in tune” sound like? Eliminating the waves between 2 players (one could be a tone generator like the Harmony Director) is a good starting point. The singing from Element #2 helps develop internal audiation (hear it before you play it) and pitch discernment (ability to hear intonation discrepancies). Encourage them to listen to the lowest octave of their note within the ensemble.

You must be consistent and persistent, especially at the beginning. The students have to hear what “right” sounds like to be able to recreate it, and in fact, want to recreate it!

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