roweenie wrote:Andy, thank you for your well thought out and gracious answer. You could have been a diplomat with the communicative skills you possess!
However, maybe Tuben was right, and I wasn't clear in my question. The implication is that if your "mouthpiece only buzz" is different than your "mouthpiece + horn buzz", then according to one school of thought, you are therefore doing something wrong.
I'd like an honest and forthright answer to this question (true or false), preferably without rancor or prejudice.
First, thanks for the kind words.
I honestly don't know how one could differentiate between their buzz (i.e., the sound of the buzz) on the mouthpiece alone and the buzz when the mouthpiece is in the tuba. I believe that Mr. Jacobs would say that he wanted them to be the same because he said that the instrument is simply an amplifier of what we are buzzing into the mouthpiece, acting like a megaphone. Physically, the lips should be vibrating in the same manner either way (psycho-motor response). When practicing on the mouthpiece, he wanted as much "buzz" in the sound as possible (as opposed to an airy sound with little buzz and mostly air sound). The more buzz in the sound on the mouthpiece, the more resonance one would produce when the mouthpiece is placed in the instrument.
What he would say is that he would not want us focusing on how it feels when we play or when we buzz, even though it will feel different, but that is a different subject from right or wrong.
The only other difference I can think of has to do with our actual approach to playing. I believe that Mr. Jacobs would definitely say that if our approach to playing on the mouthpiece alone is different than when we are playing the tuba, then our approach on the tuba is wrong, which is basically paraphrasing what Chris Olka talks about in his video I posted earlier in the thread. If we are doing something physically different on the tuba than we are on the mouthpiece, then what we are doing on the tuba is wrong. I believe that is what Mr. Jacobs is talking about.
And, maybe wrong is too strong of a word. Maybe it is better to say that if what we are doing on the tuba is different from what we are doing on the mouthpiece, what we are doing on the tuba is less efficient.