Breaking Through Limitations in Improvisation

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  • Опубліковано 17 січ 2025

КОМЕНТАРІ • 65

  • @claymationmedia6961
    @claymationmedia6961 2 роки тому +1

    Space - is the most important tip in this video. The space between the notes are equally important as the notes.

  • @lennmendoza5130
    @lennmendoza5130 Рік тому +1

    Thank you for sharing this very valid info

  • @adityatyagi4009
    @adityatyagi4009 5 років тому +37

    Kick ass lesson as usual. I think Wynton is a great example of someone who sounds like himself but you can hear Louis Armstrong, Dizzy, Clifford, Miles, Freddie, and others in his playing since he's done the hard work of learning the vocabulary of those who came before him. Well done.

  • @thaddeusford
    @thaddeusford 5 років тому +26

    Very poignant bruh. I’ve been doing this for 27 years, since I was 13...and your insight still offers a wealth of knowledge to me. Thank you.

  • @CornetBlues
    @CornetBlues 5 років тому +11

    Brilliant tips and sound advice as always!.Going to put some air through my old cornet again and think about these nuggets of great Free information !.
    Thank you
    Charlie

  • @terrybaker1888
    @terrybaker1888 5 років тому +13

    As beginner to trumpeting this very helpful for when I get better.
    Still trying to master the scales .

  • @kylepogline1790
    @kylepogline1790 5 років тому +10

    Great video Charlie! A good reminder to myself to keep my improv practice interesting and focused

  • @TheJIAlicea
    @TheJIAlicea 5 років тому +9

    Take you for this! As a below average trumpeter this is invaluable.

  • @MartiniMan
    @MartiniMan 5 років тому +10

    Excellent explanation of balance. Borders on the philosophical at times, but really describes improvisation in a unique and "Charlie Porter-ish" way. I'm not sure how someone could dislike this video, but then again, there are some folks who just "don't get it."

  • @itsgroovylue
    @itsgroovylue 3 роки тому +7

    How does this video have thumbs down?! There's knowledge in this video. Thanks Charlie!

  • @jambajoby32
    @jambajoby32 5 років тому +5

    Charlie great information! 🎺

  • @lanceritchlin9916
    @lanceritchlin9916 5 років тому +2

    I suspect a lot of us do some of these things unconsciously, but approaching improvisation with this kind of structure will certainly help. I've never heard a better or more useful explanation.

  • @Trolleyatthestation
    @Trolleyatthestation Рік тому

    Thank you so much for the great information, its extemely helpful!!!

  • @tonygodoy5968
    @tonygodoy5968 5 років тому +4

    Well done, Charlie! Well constructed advice!

  • @claudineisilva1997
    @claudineisilva1997 2 роки тому

    Very clear explanation!

  • @ramoncruz2179
    @ramoncruz2179 3 роки тому +1

    genius. better than any other video on this topic

  • @xfcane
    @xfcane Рік тому

    Thank you so much!!!

  • @tony3313
    @tony3313 3 роки тому

    Excellent. Couldn't have watched this at a better time.

  • @BobRoss-yl4ds
    @BobRoss-yl4ds Рік тому

    I'm in Mt 2nd year of band and already doing improvision and im slowly getting better awaking vool rhythms using patterns at the start and going off that

  • @musicandresandresordonez149
    @musicandresandresordonez149 3 роки тому

    That's incredible that information. Thanks I'm enjoy every lesson

  • @peterknechtli
    @peterknechtli 5 років тому +5

    You're great, Charlie, how you share your knowhow. My name is Pe-ter-Knech-tli, same syllable as Char-ly-Por-ter. I'll start practicing now ...

  • @zack4bz
    @zack4bz 2 роки тому

    Breaking through limitations is making limitations 😮 mind freaking blown

  • @bboardma
    @bboardma 5 років тому +1

    Liking the inserts.

  • @ohhiguy
    @ohhiguy 5 років тому +1

    Thank you so much. You have helped me so much over the past few years. Bless you.

  • @123Fenderman
    @123Fenderman 8 місяців тому

    wise words

  • @jesusclemente8354
    @jesusclemente8354 4 роки тому

    Best teacher-Ever

  • @selpingos
    @selpingos 5 років тому +7

    staying within a box and setting a limitation actually sets you free. Thats a great philosophy of life itself. Today there are so many ideas that say to cast of restraint and the result has been disastrous. Great thoughts Charlie and awesome lesson. Could I ask? How do you get that almost flugel sound from your trumpet? what size mouthpiece do you use. Love your tone

  • @munitemps2.0
    @munitemps2.0 4 роки тому

    Charlie you are super! Thank you for being so giving. I appreciate the emphatic trumpet playing tips, which are especially helpful to comeback horn players.

  • @UXDiogenes
    @UXDiogenes 4 роки тому

    Good tips here! Thanks for this.
    I’m a fellow creative here (designer) and aspiring trumpet player. The word you’re looking for is, I think, “constraints”. That’s what we use in my line of work. They are the bounds and limitations that help us be creative and make decisions.

  • @stephanepattofatto6289
    @stephanepattofatto6289 4 роки тому

    thanks Charlie. I really appreciate your way to explain and it is definitely helpful. Thanks

  • @pebblebeach8517
    @pebblebeach8517 4 роки тому

    Explained so clearly

  • @Makkuvideos
    @Makkuvideos 4 роки тому

    Thank you so much! This really helps give me a starting point with improv. Which is a fantastic relief.

  • @ytkindferalcat
    @ytkindferalcat 8 місяців тому

    you’re in the zone

  • @AlexTapisevic
    @AlexTapisevic 2 роки тому

    You've got a new subscriber! Greeting from Chile.

  • @fredrogers4704
    @fredrogers4704 5 років тому

    Great teacher!

  • @trompettyste15
    @trompettyste15 5 років тому +1

    Great and very inspiring video ! I can wait to work with this method, merci beaucoup, thanks a lot!

  • @izaihamellow-valle9402
    @izaihamellow-valle9402 5 років тому +2

    Wow this was the best advice ever like literally this video is fire

  • @ljbegnaud
    @ljbegnaud 5 років тому

    Great lesson. You mapped out months of practice. Great stuff!

  • @mr.widdershins1263
    @mr.widdershins1263 2 роки тому

    im so glad i found this videi

  • @vincentpenschke500
    @vincentpenschke500 5 років тому +3

    3:11 sounds like the intro to my favorite things, doesnt it?

  • @vardito10
    @vardito10 3 роки тому

    some real food for thought here. I play in a ska punk band and try to keep it simple stupid haha but there's places for jazz imrov solos and I'll definitely be thinking of your advice here at the next practice

  • @dabeagleigl
    @dabeagleigl 5 років тому +1

    Good video 100% agree, but i have to point out that this is what stravinsky talked about in “poetics of music”. I think of these as “ideas”, and more valuable than the idea of “licks”

  • @kitwanatyhimba5247
    @kitwanatyhimba5247 5 років тому +2

    Nice 🎶✨🙏🏾

  • @musicafranciscogulinrivera265

    Great

  • @TheOlk87
    @TheOlk87 5 років тому

    Really inspiring, thanks!

  • @viniciusalvestrompete
    @viniciusalvestrompete 5 років тому +1

    Obrigado Charlie, muito bom!

  • @andreamarino95
    @andreamarino95 2 роки тому

    Really, really, really thanks! That's material for the next three years probably. Do you offer some classes, somewhere, somehow?

    • @Zendii
      @Zendii 2 роки тому

      Check the description

  • @johnnyberglund841
    @johnnyberglund841 2 роки тому

    Hi Charlie, when soloing I tendence repite use of melodi selection, so I think Im not ready to do longer
    longer lines yet, working be better! Tnx Johnny

  • @Blueslad
    @Blueslad 5 років тому +4

    Great video! I like to watch these even tough its very frustrating for me. What i mean is that i cant get the music theory to stay in my head. And it isnt that i havent tried. Played with scales and i used only sheets altough i had to number every note by fingering for over two years
    Still cant understand or even remember any scale. But by ear i have learned few songs and even played few gigs in a funk band. Its just that every time i start to practise over time i find my self playing the same dark eyes or my favorite things. And for that i havent been playing so much lately.
    Do you have any tips for my situation, or should i just keep playing with my ear even that means im never gonna be a real musician?

    • @danieloleary1782
      @danieloleary1782 5 років тому +3

      Blueslad, A couple things if you haven't already .
      Memorize just the bare bones of :
      " The Second Line
      ( Joe Avery Blues ) "
      in concert Bd.
      [ That's C on the trumpet ]
      Also play along with Aaron Washington through his Bd Blues videos.
      Don't worry about the names of the chords, don't worry about how they apply, just relax and get the feel of the flow. Eyes wide open at first then eyes closed just doing your own thing , free easy and relaxed with each grouping .
      Don't try to analyze it , don't even try to understand stand it, your ear knows what it wants to hear .
      Go with the flow .
      Your learning the muscle memory to the 12 bar blues in concert Bd [ C on thetrumpet ]
      Allow your self that foundation { just that alone is enough to play along in a Concert Bd , R and B / rock band ( and there are more than a few of those
      🃏🎯🃏) or jam with any jazz muscian that can play the 12 bar blues in the key of Concert Bd which is about everybody that plays a wind instrument and most that play guitar}
      That accomplished the rest will start making a lot more sense.

    • @Blueslad
      @Blueslad 5 років тому

      @@danieloleary1782 Awesome! Thank you so much! I start doing this ASAP :) 5/5 pro tip! 🎺

  • @chasesanborn
    @chasesanborn 5 років тому

    Glad to hear your thoughts on transcribing; I’m with you. You mention ‘improvised music’, not in this context, but I wish people (again, not you) would not use that phrase to describe free or open music. I understand Ornette’s objection to the word ‘free’ to imply that it is without forethought or craftsmanship (his album title is largely responsible for the term, but evidently it was not his choice), yet it seems to imply that jazz which adheres to established language is something other than improvised. Oh well, arguing over semantics has been a part of the jazz tradition since Jelly Roll Morton and the Original Dixieland Jass Band.

  • @paulrodberg
    @paulrodberg 5 років тому

    WONDERFUL

  • @craigseganti8999
    @craigseganti8999 Рік тому

    Good stuff - thank you. however, I have trouble hearing the exact notes in fast passages, and fast runs are what I like ( and can usually do technically ), Any suggestions on transcribing aurally with this limitation? I suppose I could put solo into a program and have it slowed down artificially…feels like cheating, but whatever it takes. Also cant seem to find a book of Latin solo transcriptions like from Cuban jazz, Im not opposed to learning the written notes first as it i proves the ear also. Also, I dont like traditonal jazz much, I improvise over Latin Hoise tracks and EDM. I know this is modal, aand hear licks in my head I can workout, but am working on getting idea from head to horn instantly.

  • @music_is_life95
    @music_is_life95 5 років тому +1

    What type of mouthpiece are you using?

  • @punggung666
    @punggung666 4 роки тому

    Took me a while to understand why these advice for improv theatre only made partial sense. ;-)

  • @MoDiMariano
    @MoDiMariano 5 років тому

    "AH-HA" moment right here.

  • @ntulwisdomblow
    @ntulwisdomblow 5 років тому

    I like to have a private online class with you sir.

  • @samuelward6975
    @samuelward6975 5 років тому

    This is great, very clear explanation, however if you transcribe something and can’t find the chords/ find it difficult to work them out.
    How do you go about that?

    • @dex2862
      @dex2862 5 років тому +3

      Sam Ward I was told once that you should listen to the bass line to get an idea of the chords. I guess that combined with what the soloist and piano player plays will give you a good idea of what the chords are. I’m not an expert but maybe that will help

    • @CharliePorter
      @CharliePorter  5 років тому +4

      Listening to the bass lines, the melody and the chord voicings is definitely a great way to analyze what the chords might be. Take your best shot at figuring them out and then compare them to a lead sheet. You will learn a lot by doing this!

    • @freddiedunn6819
      @freddiedunn6819 5 років тому

      Are you still in DC? Gigging or hanging at all?

    • @samuelward6975
      @samuelward6975 5 років тому

      Charlie Porter thank you, this has been really helpful!

  • @ricaard
    @ricaard 9 місяців тому

    "Ad nauseum" 😅😅😅