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DISSERTATION - Chapter III - Case Study David & Sarah Minchin
     

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fig.17

David and Sarah Minchin are brother and sister, they are 30 and 31 respectively and play the bass trombone, tuba (David) and trombone (Sarah). Both of them have studied at the Royal Northern College of Music in Manchester and been section leaders of the National Youth Brass Band.

Whereas David has played the cornet, tuba and now bass trombone due to changes in his embouchure and repetitive strain injury, Sarah has always played the trombone. Sarah has not had any major problems with any aspect of her playing.

Sarah learned about embouchures and her muscles only at music college. She is aware that her embouchure works well and that she rocks her stomach muscles up for higher notes and down for lower notes (“tipping”) and thinks of “giving birth” using her pelvic floor muscles when playing higher notes. She says that brass teaching is much more difficult to do than string or piano – which she also teaches because “you can’t see the insides of your pupils”. You “need to treat yourself as an athlete as stamina is critical for playing at a good level”.

David is a brass teacher for the county of Cambridgeshire. He began at the age of seven with a local brass band on the cornet. After realising that high his technique was stopping his progress he moved on to the tuba at the age of 15. This was despite the fact that he had gained Grade 8 at the age of 13. He felt that his face shape had changed and his lips were too thick for the cornet.

Even throughout Music College David says that he was not told about his embouchure or his body. The college was more interested in music and sound although brass players on smaller instruments were often discussing embouchure changes.

Since he has been teaching brass pupils, David has thought more and more about player problems. He feels that beginner players need to think more about the adjustment of their jaw, and should open the space between the teeth more. He tells his pupils to use vowel sounds and to listen to the note that they are producing.

David relaxes the back of his rib cage when inhaling and tries to open it forwards, backwards and sideways. He uses a pivot technique for his jaw and uses lots of air. He advocates using the lip slurs of J. B. Arban “Cornet Method” (Boosey and Hawkes), and reading James Stamp Warm-ups & Studies, published by BIM and John Ridgeon’s “The Physiology of Brass Playing”.

 

 
     

 

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