Faster Tonguing in Two Weeks: WEEK ONE
Hi everyone! Welcome to our first two week intensive for 2025, I'm so excited to be back! I wish you all a very happy new year!
To start things off, we are looking at articulation speed and I have a video for you where I explain the tasks for the next two weeks, which can be summed up in three words: consistency, consistency, consistency.
But seriously: as long as you can find 5-10 minutes every day to work on your tonguing, you will start to see results in the next two weeks. We're all going to be learning the same study by Reginald Kell, which you can download and print out here.
You have three jobs this week:
1. Watch the video
2. Start to learn the study and post a video of your current top speed (only needs to be the first line or two!) - bonus: tell us about your tonguing speed goals!
3. Consistently practice the study every day for 5-10 minutes
Bonus job: watch Michael Wayne's fantastic course on air and articulation!
Any questions don't hesitate to write them in the forum, I'll be checking in every day to help out!
At the end of the challenge we're also going to have a Zoom check-in. That will be on Friday the 31st of January at 6pm GMT (10am PT). Everyone is welcome! We can talk all things tonguing, share our struggles and successes for the week and if anyone's feeling brave we can also play for each other!
If you enjoy this TWI and you'd like to work with me more closely 1-to-1, you should also check out tonebase's new coaching programme! We'll tailor your coaching programme to match your individual needs and you'll get a ton of personalized feedback and lessons from me.
6 replies
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Well, this was revelatory. The subito piano shows precisely whst happens to my air support! Haha! Current tempo is in the 100 bpm zone (I think); 112 is doable, and I’d love to get this up to 132 while sounding fleet and nimble, not panicked and thwacky.
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Here I present the first four lines of the Kell exercise @Heather gave us. One is at quarter note = 115 and the other at 120. I think they came out well, but I have a couple of things for which I'd appreciate getting feedback from all of you and from Heather. I have a metronome coming into my earbuds, and I think I kept up pretty well, but it doesn't sound like staccato to me. If I try to make the notes shorter, I rapidly get "tongue fatigue" and cant keep up. I know there are a couple of schools of thought on this - one is to try for shorter notes, and the other is to "fool" the audience by going a bit faster with longer notes that will be percieved as staccato. Bottom line - not that I'm likely ever to play the Corigliano Concerto, but I believe at one spot it has 128 fast staccato notes in a row. How does any Earthling do that? What are your thoughts? BTW, I see now I didn't really staccato the eighth notes!