The Three F's For A Fabulous Trumpet Embouchure - 1080P

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  • čas přidán 27. 07. 2022
  • For my trumpet players, in this video I share my thoughts on one of the most overanalyzed aspects of trumpet geekdom (of which I am a charter member) - the EMBOUCHURE. Overanalyzed or not, it's extremely important to have an embouchure set up that works for YOU, and allows you the freedom to play the music you hear in your head. Here I breakdown some fundamental aspects of the embouchure, and give you a simple formula that has helped me a ton in avoiding common pitfalls, and has helped me to keep my focus on the music. I hope you get something out of this video, and perhaps it may help your students as well! Please like, comment, share, and subscribe if you find any part of this video helpful! Wishing you love and music, Tito
    Tito Carrillo currently serves as jazz trumpet professor at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. music.illinois.edu/faculty/ti...
    Photos by Peacock Images: / peacockimages

Komentáře • 77

  • @mr.dsmusicclass4115
    @mr.dsmusicclass4115 Před 8 měsíci +8

    This is exactly the explanation I could have used in high school and college. I found this answer about 12 years ago while searching for it on CZcams. Changing my embouchure, taking time off to reset my muscle memory, coming back to the horn with a mirror and hours of long tones and scales, making sure my corners and chin stayed firm. I could barely get to a D in the staff before my chin would cave, pushing up. Working on strengthening them has done wonders, and I'm still moving forward, killing old habits. Loving the way I'm improving each day I touch the horn. It's amazing.

  • @rega3160
    @rega3160 Před rokem +4

    Tito, I am 77 years old and have just started to learn how to play the trumpet. My grandson started band this past year and chose the trumpet. I began playing so that he and I could play together. I am taking lessons, and am having fun. However, when I work on pieces that have notes starting with C and above, I look like I am trying to force myself to hit them, you can see the pressure in my veins when I try these. Thank you. Reg Adamski

    • @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605
      @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605  Před rokem +2

      Hi Reg! Thanks for your comment. Please check out my video Upper Register Breakthrough for help with reaching those higher notes, and thanks for watching my videos!

    • @beckyclark5331
      @beckyclark5331 Před 3 měsíci

      Reg, I LOVE the fact that you are taking up a new instrument so that you and your grandson can play together. You sir, are a wonderful grandfather! ❤

  • @JazzStephane
    @JazzStephane Před rokem +1

    Thank you Tito! You Always provide great information!

  • @brosan
    @brosan Před rokem

    Tito, all outstanding videos! Simple, straightforward, and easy to understand. I’ll bet you are a terrific professor!!

  • @InfiniteQuest86
    @InfiniteQuest86 Před 24 dny

    Yeah I added in lip buzzing, mouthpiece buzzing, and leadpipe buzzing many years ago. I think it's really beneficial, but I have no illusion that it resembles real playing. And all of those combined is less than 5 minutes a day. I think it's just a good embouchure builder. It helps make tone production easier when you add the horn. Some people try to go psycho with it and spend like 30 minutes doing all that.

  • @davidleadbeater4903
    @davidleadbeater4903 Před rokem +1

    Brilliant info...thanks so much 👍

  • @jambajoby32
    @jambajoby32 Před rokem +2

    That intro to this is crucial !

  • @haroldhollander3330
    @haroldhollander3330 Před rokem

    Good morning Tito. Thank you for posting this video indicating the embouchure and a very nice refresher on how to keep the corners tight the airflow good and the entire group of the three F’s. In addition, it’s great that you gave Carmine Caruso some credit for this. Keep the great videos and the excellent concise, clear, teaching coming.

  • @ianroyle364
    @ianroyle364 Před rokem +2

    Hi Tito. As a trumpet player for68 years-forty of them as a 'pro' it was like a great refresher course watching your video. Thanks-Ian

  • @melriv3345
    @melriv3345 Před rokem

    tremenda información Tito gracias and I subscribed ...so looking forward for more info 😉

  • @booch8720
    @booch8720 Před rokem +1

    Great vid my friend!!…exactly everything I talk about with my
    Youngbloods!!…even down to the horn angle! Three F’s!! Keep it up!😎🎺🔥

  • @Kevingdavy
    @Kevingdavy Před 8 měsíci

    Many thanks for sharing this brilliant and informative presentation. Respect 🎺

  • @robertseymour685
    @robertseymour685 Před rokem +2

    Three FFF's - I have been using this for the past 32 years of my teaching. It makes sense to me and many of my students. In fact, this can also be used for most wind playing instruments. Students need to understand that you must first start with a firm foundation and make it one that can be strong. Once the foundation is set, it can be built upon, by adding the stories, floors or levels. Whatever the terminology you are comfortable teaching. I earned my MEd from VanderCook College of Music, Chicago, of course. So, it is very possible I heard this being reinforced, by many band directors. Love your CZcams channel. You do a great job breaking down the concepts you are teaching. Thanks for your inspiration, education and encouraging words. Keep up the Great Work.

  • @annaaron3510
    @annaaron3510 Před rokem

    Nice job Tito for this elder comeback. Struggling with the usual range and endurance. Real PITA. Thx for the tips.

  • @gavintempleton7264
    @gavintempleton7264 Před rokem

    Thank you for sharing your knowledge Tito, From Scotland.

  • @turnitback
    @turnitback Před 10 měsíci +1

    Expert knowledge is one thing, but the ability to engage listeners is quite another. Tito obviously has the first. But he has both in equal measure. I could listen to him for hours, whatever the subject.

  • @chewingblast7492
    @chewingblast7492 Před rokem

    Thank you for sharing 👍

  • @garysmith6357
    @garysmith6357 Před rokem +4

    Love the 3 F's!!!

  • @tonyd3192
    @tonyd3192 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for posting this video. One Hallmark of a great teacher is to not only to possess valuable knowledge but to communicate to students in a way that they can incorporate your knowledge and benefit from your past experience. You demonstrate this beautifully.
    I relax my embouchure too much in the lower register and have difficulty ascending back into the middle and upper registers without resetting. Watching you describe your approach and then showing us your set-up by free buzzing has given me an example to visualize as I continue to work.
    I'm incorporating your concepts of maintaining a high setting and beginning scales and exercises in the mid-upper register then descending. Man, that's so brilliant! Sometimes the best concept is a simple concept; as trumpet players we already spend hours on exercises. I'm always happy for chances to engage my mind while playing, to do double-duty and really make the exercise work for me.
    Again, thanks so much for posting, I hope your channel continues to grow!

    • @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605
      @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605  Před rokem +1

      Thanks for these kind words Tony, and I’m so glad that my videos are helping you in some way! 🙏🏽

  • @glennmorimoto6604
    @glennmorimoto6604 Před rokem +2

    Fantastic video Tito! Really helpful info! Especially when you explain that the lips are to actually come toward the teeth and not pucker out into the mouthpiece. I still battle that "pucker" syndrome and I firmly believe it was that "monkey" picture so many of us grew up, thinking that that is how you want your embouchure to be! I look forward to your future videos! Thanks again!

  • @DedekindMusic
    @DedekindMusic Před 4 měsíci

    Thanks interesting info

  • @user-gz3kf1tm9c
    @user-gz3kf1tm9c Před 4 měsíci

    Hey Tito. I’m really enjoying your videos! I’m a 60 year old retired band director looking to recapture some of what has been lost over the years from playing so many instruments daily in my classroom. I never heard of the term, “mouth environment “ for changing registers with tongue placement. Thanks for the inspiration as I try to get back in the game.
    Thanks!

  • @svenkarlsson7282
    @svenkarlsson7282 Před rokem

    easy to understand(good teacher)

  • @lylespiegel7770
    @lylespiegel7770 Před 10 měsíci

    In turning 76, last blew my horn in 9th grade, 1961. I have to start over. Lol. Watching youtubes to learn about proper embouchure before I try to play again. I don't recall our junior hs orchestra teacher explaining all this technique

  • @moiseseducation
    @moiseseducation Před rokem

    Súper Niceeeee, thanks Máster Tito

  • @henryzielinski9786
    @henryzielinski9786 Před rokem

    Tito_At age 72 and away from my horn for 18 years I just pulled it out of the closet and am looking your way for guidance to make music again. Thanks for the 3 F's. I look to build up slowly with faithful persistence.

  • @yahelcardenas6195
    @yahelcardenas6195 Před 3 měsíci

    no habia entendido la embocadura hasta que vi este viedo y hoy ya pude tocar mis primeras notas de manera adecuada, sin hacer esfuerzos para sacar aire.

  • @bdscully
    @bdscully Před rokem +2

    Amazing video, Tito! I resonate with everything you are saying and want to take a horn lesson with you now!!!

    • @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605
      @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605  Před rokem +2

      Funny, I was gonna ask you the same thing! 🤣

    • @bdscully
      @bdscully Před rokem +1

      ​@@jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605 HA! Well maybe we can find some time to casually share ideas and learn from each other during the year. I really hope that can happen and I can't wait to do this. We would love to have you and Sara and kids over for dinner sometime too🙂

  • @zachwolfe8884
    @zachwolfe8884 Před rokem +1

    Great video! Nice to see J Mood among those great album covers.

    • @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605
      @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605  Před rokem +2

      So funny, I hated the album when I first bought it (on cassette!), and now it's one of my favorite Wynton albums! My ears weren't ready at the time.

    • @zachwolfe8884
      @zachwolfe8884 Před rokem +1

      @@jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605 Yeah, I liked it when I first heard it, but I'm not going to pretend I *understood* it!

  • @violinreflexion
    @violinreflexion Před rokem +1

    Thanks Tito for sharing your knowledge ! I'm a beginner trumpet player who fall in love with this instrument and your tips help a lot 🙏.

  • @RonDavis2012
    @RonDavis2012 Před 2 měsíci

    cool

  • @stephengoldberg393
    @stephengoldberg393 Před rokem +3

    Nice, first time I came across you. I’m 83 years old. I studied with Carmine and John Costello when I was 18 and I never became a high note player, always the jazz player. Also Art Farmer helped me out. I loved his playing. At 83 I’m still at, with long time dentures. Sometimes me sound just cuts off, I don’t think I use much pressure? Any suggestions. Thanks for the good information.

    • @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605
      @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605  Před rokem

      Hi Stephen, wow, you’ve studied with legends! Art Farmer is one of my biggest trumpet influences. Without seeing you play, it’s kind of hard to diagnose. One thing I will say is if the sound is cuts off, that sounds like a lip vibration issue. Try buzzing on the mouthpiece from a middle G and bending down to a low C without a break in the sound. Then bend up from G to C. Expand as low and as high as you can go making sure there are no breaks in the buzz. This will help you to maintain the vibration throughout. Hope this helps, thanks for watching! 🙏🏽

    • @ricksharonblumenthal7096
      @ricksharonblumenthal7096 Před rokem

      Hi ..I am 76 and just started a year ago
      Great challenge. Hang in there

  • @PabloPerez-ei9in
    @PabloPerez-ei9in Před rokem

    What about the right mouthpiece? Is there a better one for the high registers combined with the other techniques youare teaching?

  • @BlueAvianProductions
    @BlueAvianProductions Před rokem

    Tito, thank you so much for your help. This video already has me on a great track, but can you help me better understand the “flat chin” part of this? I’m not exactly sure how to interpret it…
    Thank you again! You’re a gift to the trumpet world!!

    • @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605
      @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605  Před rokem

      Thank you for watching Jacob! 🙏🏽. By flat chin I mean that you should be creating a flat surface with your chin, which will take some flexing of those muscles. We don’t necessarily want like a puffy chin with lots of air pockets, for example. There are different opinions out there about this, but in my experience, this has been helpful in stabilizing my embouchure and allowing my lips to vibrate freely.

    • @BlueAvianProductions
      @BlueAvianProductions Před rokem

      @@jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605
      Thank you so much, Tito 🙏
      I’ve been practicing this and it’s already helping me
      You’re the man!!
      PS - Just downloaded Urbanessence, and I’ll be turning my friends onto it

  • @jamesf1525
    @jamesf1525 Před rokem

    Un fuerte abrazo pa' ti Tito! I hope you're teaching in an institution somewhere so you can share this wisdom with many people as you are doing here.

    • @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605
      @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605  Před rokem

      Thanks James! I’ve been a full-time professor of trumpet and jazz studies at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign for 17 years.

    • @jamesf1525
      @jamesf1525 Před rokem

      @@jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605 That's great! You're an excellent communicator Tito. I'll be watching all your past and future videos. Amateur senior (retired) comeback player, with limited range and lifespan at this point, but I play in a New Horizon community band ans want to play well as a section player.

  • @christianpasache1250
    @christianpasache1250 Před rokem

    😊😊😊😊😊saludos masterr from Peruuu

  • @martinyodaiken1890
    @martinyodaiken1890 Před rokem +1

    Hi Tito I am 75 years of age and took up the trumpet 18 months ago. I am struggling with endurance especially at upper f and g on the staff. I have worked hard at strengthening my chops practicing for an hour a day, using lip buzzing, Arban, long notes as well as a pressure gauge attached to a mouthpiece. My teacher suggests that I am trying to go to fast and I am already past where I should be after 18 months. Do you have any advice for an old man who is determined to play well before he pops the planet.

    • @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605
      @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605  Před rokem

      Please watch my video called Upper Register Breakthrough where I talk about expanding range. Are you practicing softly with good lower body breath support? That was key for me to teach my body to access high notes in a more relaxed manner. Get the notes first, volume second.

  • @stephengoldberg393
    @stephengoldberg393 Před rokem +1

    Hey Tito, wrote to you before, Steve Goldberg. How do I get in touch for a private on line lesson?

    • @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605
      @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605  Před rokem

      Hi Stephen, thanks for your message! Unfortunately, I am not able to take on more students at the moment. Let me know if you have a topic suggestion for an upcoming video, and I’ll do my best to include it in an upcoming video.

  • @randallzielinski3094
    @randallzielinski3094 Před rokem +1

    I'm surprised you haven't found more students needing both minor and major ebouchure changes. It's possible to play pretty well at a high school level with all manor of screwed up embouchures, using muscles in complete opposition to the "3 Fs" you describe. I certainly did! Changing to the flat chin, engaging the corners firmly but without pinching them in, and engaging the "sneer" muscles to raise the cheeks and emphasize the cheek folds in order to enable the lips to be thinned out and move in/back to the teeth is not a very natural intuitive thing for most humans. It was a very drastic and most difficult change for me. Am I really that rare?

    • @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605
      @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605  Před rokem

      Those are undoubtedly a lot of adjustments in themselves, but I was referring to having to make a major embouchure change where you need to bring more top or bottom lip into the mouthpiece and literally buzz in a different manner than before. Most students I encounter don’t need to go that far.

    • @randallzielinski3094
      @randallzielinski3094 Před rokem +1

      Ah I see. I've moved the mouthpiece a bit more towards center, and I found that change to be minor. Trivial compared to the 3-4 months of not having a clue how to make a sound when I had to reverse all the muscle effort. I went from pushing and squeezing everything into the mouthpiece to the 3Fs. Not much of a visible change, just more pink showing towards the corners as I unpinched everything. But I'd call it a massive enbouchure change that has taken years to dial in (with fantastic results). I gotta believe many students suffer from that malady, despite the mouthpiece being in the right place.

  • @GoldGamr
    @GoldGamr Před 5 měsíci

    I'm in my freshman year of high school, so I've only been playing for around 3 and a half years. I noticed in the video you said that the only time you should change embouchure is when you don't have enough top lip, but it seems that I am having the complete opposite problem. As I start to get higher, my bottom lip rolls in, so I can only get to about a G on top of the staff. When I take the mouthpiece off, I notice that I have around 75% top lip and 25% bottom, which I know is a really big problem. I've been trying some things out, like the charlie porter method, but the same issue keeps occurring. I was wondering if you had any tips for ways to fix this?

    • @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605
      @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605  Před 5 měsíci

      There are many terrific players that are top lip dominant. Chris Botti comes to mind. Some of my tips may not work for you, but that doesn’t mean you necessarily need to change your embouchure. If I were you I would observe players like Chris Botti, especially watching them as they change registers. There is a person who studied brass embouchures and even categorized them into 4 general groups, Dr. Donald Reinhardt. His stuff gets pretty technical, but you might find some help there for your embouchure type. I have a former student who is top lip dominant, and she can play higher than me! So it’s more than possible to grow as a trumpet player being top lip dominant.

    • @GoldGamr
      @GoldGamr Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605I don't know if this matters at all but my bottom lip is a lot larger than my top lip by about 2.5x.

  • @_maxcaulfield_4672
    @_maxcaulfield_4672 Před rokem

    I always find myself curled in my upper lip too much. That diminished my vibration...

  • @selpingos
    @selpingos Před rokem +1

    I find it hard to start buzzing a G. Is doing a C ok and working up?

    • @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605
      @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605  Před rokem

      Yes you can try that. Remember that this technique is a workout for the corners and chin, which is why you don’t want to overdo lip buzzing. Try placing your thumb and fingers on your corners while lip buzzing, and make sure the lips are coming in towards the teeth. See if you can get any note above low C to come out, even if it’s a D or E. Then work from there. Hope this helps

    • @selpingos
      @selpingos Před rokem

      @@jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605 Thanks buddy. That was fast

  • @vitaliyfrantsevvolkov8684

    Aupa Tito! Porque no das clases en castellano

  • @Hovermaster
    @Hovermaster Před 6 měsíci +1

    I've been playing for many years, and have really started looking at lip formation. Personally, the very center of my upper lip sort of protrudes downward. I call it my lip tit. I have oven wondered if that extra amount of "meat' inside the mouthpiece is what has hampered me from attaining a solid upper register.. above High C. Eric Miyashiro appears to me to have a similar lip structure, but it doesn't hamper his range. Thanks for your post.

  • @da11king
    @da11king Před rokem +1

    I just discovered this video on CZcams, been playing since 2020. I practice almost everyday but I don't like my sound. Sounds flat and the embouchure is not balanced from low cloudy low register notes to high sharper notes(high D, high D#, E) I guess my aperture is not precise. When I buzz a G, I get air coming out of many places. Thanks for the video looking forward to more

    • @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605
      @jazzmindwithtitocarrillo605  Před rokem +1

      Thanks da11king! What kind of sound are you going for? Is there someone that comes close to what you want to sound like? Remember that your sound starts with your own vivid imagination about what you want to sound like. I tell my students to always have two guiding principles: you want it to sound great and feel easy. That’s what I’m always searching for, and I need both elements, one is not enough. As for buzzing the G, I think the lips-mouthpiece-horn exercise will work well for you if you do it everyday. One of the purposes of the 3 F’s is to create a seal so that air doesn’t escape out of the sides. Imagine yourself blowing gently through a tiny straw. Try buzzing that way.

  • @elsonharewood7933
    @elsonharewood7933 Před rokem

    Thanks for the tips!
    I recently changed my embrochure. I was playing of-centre to the right. I'm now more centre to get a better seal of the aperture and I getting a little challenge when I descend to the lower register but I'm back to to top of my range and fairly çomfortable at C, two spaces above the stave.myembrochure

  • @SylasXavier
    @SylasXavier Před rokem

    Are you a dizzy gillespie sun? hahaha

  • @victorumrikhin9954
    @victorumrikhin9954 Před 2 měsíci

    I like 3Fs and I'd add 4s F...Fu#k lip bussing...I think lip bussing is a good only for worm up...If you can whistle from low to hi sound using lip muscles using right Embouchure, right mouthpiece, strong air breathing into mouthpiece hole like playing flute and brain you can play the trumpet...Make sure do not use too much pressure on your lips...use muscles and air pressure...If your lips turns blue you are in big trouble...you are stopping the blood supply to your lips...stop to play immediately...Good luck!!!

  • @karlhubben8009
    @karlhubben8009 Před rokem +1

    Two F's are o.k but imO a flat chin isn't a must!

  • @kolbyarnold
    @kolbyarnold Před rokem

    4th F could be foward lips! Goes along with flat chin