It's the attitude!!
Altitude and Tuba Playing?
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Re: Altitude and Tuba Playing?
It's not the altitude,
It's the attitude!!
It's the attitude!!
I am committed to the advancement of civil rights, minus the Marxist intimidation and thuggery of BLM.
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Re: Altitude and Tuba Playing?
[LIKE!]schlepporello wrote:It can be done.
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Re: Altitude and Tuba Playing?
Everybody has talked about the physiological effects, including duration: how about pitch and intonation?
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tubalex
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Re: Altitude and Tuba Playing?
I live and work at 7000 feet. Every summer I spend about a month at sea level in the midwest and east coast, and I frequently visit lower elevations in surrounding states. I grew up and went to school at or near sea level, and with plenty of humidity.
For me, the biggest difference is the dryness, and that seems to be what hits touring brass players coming through Flagstaff the hardest, too. For us it's a double-whammy; we are on a mountain in the middle of the desert. Also, I find that I have more trouble playing extra-long phrases between breaths up here. Many of my Snedecor videos were recorded at altitude, and I must admit some of them were perceptibly harder than when I learned them as a student and living at sea level, even though my playing is *theoretically* smarter and more efficient now.
We frequently have excellent pros coming through town for just one day, and with no time to acclimate the biggest problems to hit them are dryness and needing to adjust to more frequent breathing.
When I first moved to Flagstaff from Indianapolis, it took me the entire first semester (four months) to feel normal at altitude. After six years of spending July and August lower and wetter than here, it takes me about two or three weeks to feel normal when I get back to AZ. When I do perform at lower elevations, I find I have a window of about three or four days when I feel like superman, brass-wise, and then I've acclimated, more or less.
Also, it is still infinitely easier for me to exercise at lower elevations. That has a lot to do with why there are so many professional and Olympic athletes who live and train here in Flagstaff. My four-mile jog today really beat me up, but a month ago I jogged six miles in LA without getting tired or dehydrated.
It will all depend on the level of elevation, other characteristics of the region, and of course your own individual physiology. I have not had a guest wind-player in Flagstaff (and this is covering many top-level players on all woodwind and brass instruments) who did not perceive new challenges in their playing at this altitude.
For me, the biggest difference is the dryness, and that seems to be what hits touring brass players coming through Flagstaff the hardest, too. For us it's a double-whammy; we are on a mountain in the middle of the desert. Also, I find that I have more trouble playing extra-long phrases between breaths up here. Many of my Snedecor videos were recorded at altitude, and I must admit some of them were perceptibly harder than when I learned them as a student and living at sea level, even though my playing is *theoretically* smarter and more efficient now.
We frequently have excellent pros coming through town for just one day, and with no time to acclimate the biggest problems to hit them are dryness and needing to adjust to more frequent breathing.
When I first moved to Flagstaff from Indianapolis, it took me the entire first semester (four months) to feel normal at altitude. After six years of spending July and August lower and wetter than here, it takes me about two or three weeks to feel normal when I get back to AZ. When I do perform at lower elevations, I find I have a window of about three or four days when I feel like superman, brass-wise, and then I've acclimated, more or less.
Also, it is still infinitely easier for me to exercise at lower elevations. That has a lot to do with why there are so many professional and Olympic athletes who live and train here in Flagstaff. My four-mile jog today really beat me up, but a month ago I jogged six miles in LA without getting tired or dehydrated.
It will all depend on the level of elevation, other characteristics of the region, and of course your own individual physiology. I have not had a guest wind-player in Flagstaff (and this is covering many top-level players on all woodwind and brass instruments) who did not perceive new challenges in their playing at this altitude.
Alexander Lapins, DM
Eastman Musical Instruments Artist
University of Tennessee Faculty
Blue Lake Fine Arts Camp Faculty
Quintasonic Brass
http://www.music.utk.edu/faculty/lapins.php
Eastman Musical Instruments Artist
University of Tennessee Faculty
Blue Lake Fine Arts Camp Faculty
Quintasonic Brass
http://www.music.utk.edu/faculty/lapins.php
