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The most important sensory organ for you as a musician is your ear. The
goal of this book is to put listening to yourself more at the center of
your practicing.
Through the routine of daily exercises we run the danger of
limiting our concentration to mechanical procedures. Learning happens
mostly through our senses: seeing, feeling, and hearing. The complex physical
processes of playing a musical instrument can, however, only function
when the analytical, logical thought of the left brain is in balance with
the emotional, pictorial thought of the right brain. It is exactly this
balance which is guided by our
capacity for musical imagination.
Every note we play is an expression of our individual personality and
has a life of its own. This is the reason for the fascination that the
trumpet exudes. We should give the same musical attentiveness to so-called
warm-up exercises that we give to the study of etudes and
concertos. (After all, the E-flat Major concerto of Joseph Haydn begins
with a simple scale figure).
The two-part nature of the present exercises programs our
concentration to focus our thinking on the essential. The fundamental
idea is always simplification, given by the 2nd Part or the preliminary
exercises, and by the blending of the two parts, into which we are submerged.
Embark, therefore, on a new way of thinking in sound, according to the
motto Dale Clevenger, solo hornist of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra,
so aptly formulated:
Your two best friends are your ear and
your air!
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