I tongue where my gum and teeth meet is that correct?
I developed this as a beginner since it seemed the easiest. Is it right?
If not, how to learn to "re-tongue".
PLEASE HELP
-Raghul





There are two places where your gum and teeth meet - the upper teeth and lower teeth. Which do you mean?TheTuba wrote:Where do you guys tongue on your mouth?
I tongue where my gum and teeth meet is that correct?
-Raghul


Those differ a bit with geography. Certainly in the US alone a New Yorker, California, and Georgian would say "too" considerably differently. Someone from Spain or Korea would pronounce those quite a bit different.Mark Finley wrote:Say "too toh doo doh" slowly

So you and he would probably have the same understanding of what those syllables sound like. Someone not from there very well might not.Mark Finley wrote:He lives 30 miles from me, near dallastimothy42b wrote:Those differ a bit with geography. Certainly in the US alone a New Yorker, California, and Georgian would say "too" considerably differently. Someone from Spain or Korea would pronounce those quite a bit different.Mark Finley wrote:Say "too toh doo doh" slowly
The OP's username is a common one in India.

+1000fourbass wrote:"I always believe it best to be somewhat unconscious of our physical maneuvers and highly conscious of our musical goals." - Arnold Jacobs

You have be a native speaker of French, no? to get it right (because Arban was.)timothy42b wrote:So you and he would probably have the same understanding of what those syllables sound like. Someone not from there very well might not.


Yes, that's my point.Donn wrote:You have be a native speaker of French, no? to get it right (because Arban was.)timothy42b wrote:So you and he would probably have the same understanding of what those syllables sound like. Someone not from there very well might not.

I agree, when it works.Leland wrote:+1000fourbass wrote:"I always believe it best to be somewhat unconscious of our physical maneuvers and highly conscious of our musical goals." - Arnold Jacobs
.

Sure, but there are only so many ways that an English-esque "toh" can sound before it has to be written differently (such as "thoh," or "too," or "tyoo").timothy42b wrote: I agree, when it works.
It works for you and for some students. Every student is different and a good many need a different approach.

Leland wrote:as soon as possible, we got away from the physiological descriptors and started using syllables. Once he understood that different consonants resulted in different tongue placement, we didn't need to over-analyze the tongue anymore.



If you are using dorsal tonguing, depending on the length of your tongue the tip might on the front teeth, between them, or behind the lower teeth in the gully.windshieldbug wrote: I had been using, as you say, mostly a teeth/gum point of contact which slipped to the tips of the front teeth in the low register.
After the dental work my sound and articulation change, which was NOT the case when I had my wisdom teeth removed.

