![Mr. Green :mrgreen:](./images/smilies/icon_mrgreen.gif)
/Tom
It's not impossible and I believe he did know his bussiness. I agree it's impossible if you haven't enough practice on factitious notes, and obviously most haven't.Doug Elliott wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2024 2:36 pm Don't you love it when a trombone player (Sammy) writes stuff he knows very well is impossible?
But I'm sure that was done in the copywork or editing by somebody else.
Aw, man, you stole my joke!
I've seen pics of trombone sections in the Big Band era with their derbies mounted on stands.
American politics if anyone didn't get that. Had to Google Arnold to understand. I thought he was some unknown bass trombonist who could do plunger work and apparently he at least had the tools to do part of it. I get the joke now and what's not a joke is your ex-president apparently has a special interest in Arnold's physics.
Oh, I have something like this! Except it's a little PVC tube with a slot in it to hold a hat mute. The round end of the tube goes over the top of my trombone stand and the tube stands straight up. There's a slot at the top of the tube that a hat mute sits in, so that the hat just sits there right in front of my bell and I can lean forward to it and use the mute. The same thing could be done with a plunger if one was so motivated. The whole thing costs about $4 to make.
How? How is it done? Let's see...Olofson wrote: ↑Fri Oct 25, 2024 7:06 am How dificult is it? I just hade a student who played basstrombone for two years, never used a plunger before. I gave her a plunger, taught her how to hold it, played a low C with plunger and told her to do the same. After a couple minutes she could play low C with plunger.
No I do not think you aretbdana wrote: ↑Fri Oct 25, 2024 10:59 amHow? How is it done? Let's see...Olofson wrote: ↑Fri Oct 25, 2024 7:06 am How dificult is it? I just hade a student who played basstrombone for two years, never used a plunger before. I gave her a plunger, taught her how to hold it, played a low C with plunger and told her to do the same. After a couple minutes she could play low C with plunger.
Right hand holds the slide.
Left hand holds the plunger.
Which hand depresses the F trigger?
I'm konfyoozed.
He was the inventor of iced tea.
Actually I believe a proper "Arnold Palmer" is 1/2 iced tea + 1/2 lemonade. Nice summer beverage.
The same golfer that made a HUGE impression on your former president? If you hadn't brought it up I wouldn't know about it, and I would have lived the rest of my life uneducated. I would never have known about Mr Palmer and I would still be uneducated about what truly impresses your ex-president. Ice tea? Yes, that may well be, but apparently that was not the BIG
LOL! Busted! Yes, on that recording I did play the low D on a small bore tenor with no F-attachment as a factitious or "false" note. I had forgotten about that until you called me on it.imsevimse wrote: ↑Fri Oct 25, 2024 12:01 pmNo I do not think you are. I heard you could play a factitious note in one of your shared solos, a low D. A nice recording by the way. I guess you did play that note on the small bore you played everything else on in that rec. Now switch to bass. Change to C, get the plunger and give it a try on 7:th pos. Of course no trigger
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/Tom
Yes. It was a joke. He didn't actually invent iced tea. I was being facetious.
He was one of the greatest golfers of all time. Golf is not specific to the United States. In fact, we didn't invent it. Sorry you had to find out about this from such an uncouth person.imsevimse wrote: ↑Fri Oct 25, 2024 1:12 pmThe same golfer that made a HUGE impression on your former president? If you hadn't brought it up I wouldn't know about it, and I would have lived the rest of my life uneducated. I would never have known about Mr Palmer and I would still be uneducated about what truly impresses your ex-president. Ice tea? Yes, that may well be, but apparently that was not the BIGthing in this joke.
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/Tom
Just try and you find out what is best.tbdana wrote: ↑Fri Oct 25, 2024 1:41 pmLOL! Busted! Yes, on that recording I did play the low D on a small bore tenor with no F-attachment as a factitious or "false" note. I had forgotten about that until you called me on it.imsevimse wrote: ↑Fri Oct 25, 2024 12:01 pm
No I do not think you are. I heard you could play a factitious note in one of your shared solos, a low D. A nice recording by the way. I guess you did play that note on the small bore you played everything else on in that rec. Now switch to bass. Change to C, get the plunger and give it a try on 7:th pos. Of course no trigger
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/Tom![]()
Oddly, I don't think I've ever tried to play a low C on bass trombone without using at least one trigger. Today I'm gonna do what you suggest and experiment to see if I can get that note to speak without using a trigger. You say in 7th position, but I wonder if it can also be played in 4th. I guess I'll find out. Thanks.![]()
No I do not think you are. I heard you could play a factitious note in one of your shared solos, a low D. A nice recording by the way. I guess you did play that note on the small bore you played everything else on in that rec. Now switch to bass. Change to C, get the plunger and give it a try on 7:th pos. Of course no trigger
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/Tom
I think you missed the "half-plunger" when you read the part. Look again and it will make sense. The post is about a solution to solve this and play as is.timothy42b wrote: ↑Sat Oct 26, 2024 6:59 amNo I do not think you are. I heard you could play a factitious note in one of your shared solos, a low D. A nice recording by the way. I guess you did play that note on the small bore you played everything else on in that rec. Now switch to bass. Change to C, get the plunger and give it a try on 7:th pos. Of course no trigger
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/Tom
Or, C in F trigger 2cnd. That works and may be easier for some, at least we don't have to stretch, and don't need the attachment tuned so flat.
That chart someone provided of where the factitious notes can be played was really helpful, as was your little exercise for working on them.
Then by extension you can play the pitch of pedal Bb in T4, and it has quite a different character, more like a note I think. And the B natural in T3 of course.
I get your poin but Im trying to share knowledge here about this. I do know I can skip the plunger if I want to. I can always do whatever I want. Right now I hope some are openminded and get a plunger and test for themselves. If you can do it, or if you think you can learn how to do it then you can use it when the problem occurs, if not then don't use the plunger or get a trumpeter to hold it for youWilktone wrote: ↑Sat Oct 26, 2024 9:26 am Just have the trombone section play open, like I believe Nestico originally wrote it. Again, Basie's recording has trumpets in half plunger and the trombone section is open there. It's probably something that inadvertently got added in by a well-intentioned editor when the chart got published.
If you really feel the urge to have the trombone section muted there you can have the bass trombonist play with a bucket or cup mute in to approximate the sound of the rest of the section, or even have the entire trombone section play with buckets.
Yes and you could rewrite a part that is too high or to fast or too exposed for you too. You could even give it to someone else. If the thread was about 'Life is too short to worry about these kind of details" and "how to rewrite things and make things easier" then I would agree but in this case the "glass is half full" and not "half empty". Why go to the moon? The answer is YOU did it and it could be done. This is turning to philosophy but it was actually about a specific technical problem and how to solve that part I showed you in my first post, and how to be able to play it as written.
What does it look like? Do you have a pic?tbdana wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 9:37 amOh, I have something like this! Except it's a little PVC tube with a slot in it to hold a hat mute. The round end of the tube goes over the top of my trombone stand and the tube stands straight up. There's a slot at the top of the tube that a hat mute sits in, so that the hat just sits there right in front of my bell and I can lean forward to it and use the mute. The same thing could be done with a plunger if one was so motivated. The whole thing costs about $4 to make.
Not quite sure what you mean by 'F bass trombone.' Sammy wrote this chart in ~1975 (copyright 1976) for the Basie band (for which he arranged from ~1967-1984). The 4th trombonist then in the Basie band was Bill Hughes, who played a Bb/F single-valve bass trombone. The low C had to be played on the F-attachment at (very) flat 6th position. That of course would make holding a half-plunger while pressing the F-valve lever rather awkward!jacobgarchik wrote: ↑Sat Oct 26, 2024 5:37 pm Nestico was writing for the F bass trombone, which was more common at the time.
I don't, sorry. This is the only photo I have and you can't see it, but you can see the position where the mute is held, whether it be a hat or plunger.Kbiggs wrote: ↑Sat Oct 26, 2024 6:51 pmWhat does it look like? Do you have a pic?tbdana wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 9:37 am
Oh, I have something like this! Except it's a little PVC tube with a slot in it to hold a hat mute. The round end of the tube goes over the top of my trombone stand and the tube stands straight up. There's a slot at the top of the tube that a hat mute sits in, so that the hat just sits there right in front of my bell and I can lean forward to it and use the mute. The same thing could be done with a plunger if one was so motivated. The whole thing costs about $4 to make.
A bargain at half the price.jacobgarchik wrote: ↑Sat Oct 26, 2024 5:37 pm Nestico was writing for the F bass trombone, which was more common at the time.
Thein makes a modern instrument that can play half plunger on trigger notes and costs $15,000.
This sounds simple to make and very useful. I'm going to put it on my list of stuff to build. Thanks for sharing your idea.tbdana wrote: ↑Thu Oct 24, 2024 9:37 amOh, I have something like this! Except it's a little PVC tube with a slot in it to hold a hat mute. The round end of the tube goes over the top of my trombone stand and the tube stands straight up. There's a slot at the top of the tube that a hat mute sits in, so that the hat just sits there right in front of my bell and I can lean forward to it and use the mute. The same thing could be done with a plunger if one was so motivated. The whole thing costs about $4 to make.
I didn't miss it (pretends to be offended! but not really) I just veered off topic.