Thank you all. It is interesting to see many viewpoints.
For additional information on band scene of my school (and the vast majority of school bands in Thailand):
- Students normally start in grade 6 or 7, except in schools that has elementary band program which normally start in grade 4. My school band starts at grade 6.
- In contrast to some western school band, most students have little to no prior knowledge of band instrument. Some cannot even read music. I, for instance, at the time of joining the band back in 2004, could read treble clef but cannot read bass clef nor read rhythms accurately. However, recently since the parents are more well-off than in the past, some students has studied piano or violin prior to joining. Most don't have their own instrument, and I personally discourage buying since standard band instruments are relatively expensive when taking Thai income into account (average salaryman would make around $1500-2000 a month at the time his/her child is in grade 6). Private teacher is out of question. Being able to afford specialized staff for each section is a privilage only some of the larger schools can enjoy. Even with specialized staff, vast difference in experience and skill among the students makes teaching them challenging. Imagine having to teach a near-pro 11th grader at the same time with newcomer 6th grader.
- My school band practice every day from 16.30 - 18.30. Wednesday and Thursday is marching practice. No weekend session. But many students end up practicing only 3 days a week, the bare minimum set by the band director. Some schools practice more, many less. Some can only practice in the morning before class or at lunch break, potentially less than 1 hour each. This is sometimes, especially in remote areas, due to the students' hous being to far and it is unsafe for them to stay until dark. But sometimes it is due to parents or even other teachers not wanting them to "concentrate too much on something that is not studying".
- In my school band, the students are expected to be able to play grade 1 song around 2 months after joining. Mind you, they are taught almost from zero in this time frame: breathing, embouchure, long tones, tonguing, basic music reading, basic marching, etc. Some schools even require the students to play school march and/or national anthem, which is normally around grade 1.5 - 2.5 depending on the arrangement. The overall mindset is not "building good foundation" but to get the students to be ready for use in school ceremonies as quickly as possible, otherwise the band director might be reprimanded by the school management (high cost of instrument and time invested but no obvious return). This is the recurring problem in most school, especially smaller or more remote school.
- As a result, the students has quite limited time to learn the basics, and thus "default positions" becomes a thing. Some even refuse to use "alternate" positions on the ground that they "aren't used to them", because they have practiced with "default positions" all the time it becomes muscle memory for them already.
- Ear training is limited. Back in my time, the band had only light marching session one day a week, so we had time to do ear-training twice a week. Now ear training is done only during summer holiday practice session. So expecting a student to listen and adjust the 6th and 7th positions, with no visual aid, is not quite realistic. Some schools don't even know what ear training is. And Buddhist temples have no singing like in churches, which I think helps with ear training quite a lot.
BrassSection wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2024 2:44 pm
As a person that is 5’12”, I have no trouble reaching 7th position and even a little beyond, just not enough to get a low Eb. I can get trumpet down to that, using 3rd valve trigger and just a little lip.
You mean 6' right?
Average Thai students in grade 6-7 is only around 150-165 cm (5' - 5' 5"). I am 5' 10", which is almost the upper ceiling of normal Thai height.
tbdana wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2024 6:05 pm
Sawadee ka. Since it is the last Monday in July, I'll begin my post with this out of respect for Vajiralongkorn.
Thank you. Some love him, some don't quite
For me I love his father since Rama IX had done so many good things to help Thai people. Rama X (Vajiralongkorn) also has done many goods, but his personal life and personality is considered by some to be more controversial than his father.