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Trumpet Inspiration 11

There are so many amazing videos of Wynton Marsalis, so it’s hard to choose just one! He is one of the few musicians who achieved world-class status as both a classical and jazz performer. He currently leads the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra in New York City, an ensemble that includes several other outstanding trumpet players. He grew up in New Orleans in a very musical family — his father and brothers are also world-class musicians.

Here are two short videos that show his ability to perform jazz and classical music at the highest level. In the first video, he performs the jazz standard “Cherokee” with a harmon mute. The second video is the 3rd movement of the Haydn Trumpet Concerto, performed on an Eb trumpet.

There are many other jazz and classical videos on YouTube featuring Wynton Marsalis. Feel free to browse on your own and look up others!

New Beginner Technique Video

New video featuring a great technique exercise for beginners using the first 5 notes of 6 different major scales. Range and tempo are perfect for beginners who are ready to start moving the fingers and tongue in eighth note patterns.

Follow on-screen instructions for each key: 1. Identify difficult fingerings 2. Finger along with recording 3. Play!

Sheet music for this exercise also included here: Trumpet Technique #1 beginner

Trumpet Inspiration 9

This week’s trumpet video is one of my favorite classical trumpet recordings. I still remember it blowing my mind when I first heard this CD in college. The featured performer is Russian trumpet virtuoso Sergei Nakariakov.

He is playing Introduction and Rondo Capriccioso by Camille Saint-Saens, which was originally written for a violin soloist (not trumpet). Few trumpeters throughout history could pull off the technical and musical demands of this piece as well as Nakariakov does here.

Here’s a link to a great interview of Nakariakov from Trumpetland.com.

Trumpet Inspiration 8

This week’s featured trumpeter is John Armstrong performing The Carnival of Venice by J.B. Arban with the United States Navy Band. Arban (the composer) was a great cornet soloist and author of one of the most important trumpet method books for high school, college, and professional players.

Cornet solos from Arban’s era feature beautiful melodies and virtuosic displays of technique. Double and triple tonguing are used extensively throughout the piece.

The Navy Band is one of the country’s premier military bands in Washington DC, and its members are world-class musicians. Congrats to great trumpeter (and friend!) John Armstrong on such an effortless and musical performance!

Trumpet Inspiration 6

This week’s trumpet inspiration features 2 videos of the Duke Ellington classic Take the A Train. Several of my students who advanced to the 2nd round of the All-State Jazz audition here in Texas are learning to improvise over this tune. Both videos feature outstanding trumpet solos.

The first video is the Duke Ellington Orchestra in 1962 and features trumpeter Ray Nance.

The second video is the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra featuring trumpeter Ryan Kisor.

Trumpet Inspiration 5

This week’s inspiring performance is the 4th movement of Symphonie Fantastique by Hector Berlioz. The orchestra is a combination of members of the Philharmonic Orchestra of Radio France and the Simon Bolivar Youth Orchestra of Venezuela. The conductor is Gustavo Dudamel, currently the music director of the Los Angeles Philharmonic.

Symphonie Fantastique is a 5-movement work inspired by a fantastical story imagined by the composer. The 4th movement — March to the Scaffold — depicts a crazy scene of the main character dreaming he is being led to his own execution. The music is a brilliant mixture of wild, solemn, and exciting melodies. Dudamel and the orchestra capture the musical insanity of Berlioz’s imaginiation in this wonderfully over-the-top performance.

Oskar Bohme: Composer Profile

One of this year’s All-State etudes in Texas was composed by Oskar Bohme, a great trumpet player and composer during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Knowing a little about his life and listening to his other trumpet compositions can give us insight to better perform this etude.

Bohme was born and educated in Germany, though most of his professional career was in Russia. He composes in the Romantic style, which is rare for trumpet music (most of our repertoire is from either before or after the Romantic Era in the timeline of music history).

His best-known compositions are his Brass Sextet and Trumpet Concerto (video below). This music expresses a wide range of musical emotion: from sad and angst-filled minor-key melodies to beautifully gentle major-key melodies. I’d encourage us all to approach the All-State etude with similar emotional range.

Trumpet Inspiration 4

This week’s trumpet inspiration is an incredible performance of Kevin McKee’s Centennial Horizon by Kevin Gebo (trumpet) and Jessica McKee (piano). The piece contains slow and fast movements (with an interlude in between) that are inspired by the “beauty and adventure of what is truly an amazing place: Colorado (the Centennial State).”

The piece takes us on an epic musical journey that highlights so many different aspects of what the trumpet is capable of. Enjoy Gebo’s beautiful tone and inspired phrasing, and listen for the wonderful collaboration between trumpet and piano.

The musicians involved in this project are long-time friends of mine. Their compositions, performances, and collaborations have contributed so much to the classical trumpet repertoire.

First movement (beginning) Interlude (5:30) Second Movement (6:45)