If you are a school band or orchestra teacher you know how frustrating and confusing it can be to deal with French horns. The parts that seem simple to you seem impossible to the players. When you need to hear them they can't play louder. They seem to tire out faster than anyone else. They play the right notes occasionally and you don't know why. What to do!
We are here to help. Horn playing is different and presents different challenges but once you understand them you'll be able to deal with them.
Common Problems and Some Solutions
Most of the problems you can fix from a podium boil down to one or two common and obvious mistakes. Poor posture, shallow breathing and poor timing are culprits in the vast majority of problems.
Poor posture makes efficient breathing difficult if not impossible, reduces mental clarity and shifts vital parts of the anatomy (abdomen, left hand, right hand, tongue, etc) into bad positions.
Shallow breathing is the pariah of horn playing. If you see a player take a gulping or snorting breath, correct them. Six Places is a really good simple way of teaching breathing, as is the Reverse Ho Ho Ho. A horn is the second longest instrument in the ensemble, with very narrow tubing and a small mouthpiece. If you don't have a lot of air in you you can't control the beast very well!
Hitting the wrong notes: As you go higher on any brass instrument the open notes get closer and closer together. Horns have a huge range and most of what we play is in the higher range. Our notes with the same fingerings are closer together than a trumpets and a lot closer together than on a low brass instrument.
You can stop and help them find the first notes of a phrase. Many times just finding the right partial to begin on helps a lot. If they continue to have trouble, be positive and suggest they follow a daily practice routine. Have them follow our Beginner Sample Practice Plan.
We also really like Erik Bolvin's Really Big Songbook for beginners and intermediate players. It is all common melodies. Many instrumental books have folk songs from around the world, some classical tunes and new compositions. The Really Big Songbook has tunes that are known to most kids so they can tell if they are playing the right notes.
The horn books in many band programs tend to move too high in the range too quickly. It can take years for a young student to be comfortable playing a note at the top of the staff. Our advice is let them take notes down and octave whenever needed.
Getting tired is a common problem. Our mouthpieces are tiny and we ask tiny muscles to do Herculean work every day. Horn players' chops do get tired more than other instruments.
You can work with your players to convince them they can leave an occasional note out to get some strength back. Horn parts for any level should not have long sections without breaks. Students and amateurs feel compelled to play every note on the page as if gospel; pros want to make the best music and if that means leaving some notes out - then that's what to do.
Many ensembles have a 'warm up' rehearsal right before the concert. Tell your horn players not to play! Why waste precious chop strength at a rehearsal?
Where they sit makes a lot of difference to horn players. Sometimes we forget that the bells face backwards. If we are blowing into soft curtains it is going to be tough to play loud. If we are in a big boomy room and have to play quietly it will present challenges.
But the worst is when there is something behind the horn player that is putting sound into the bell as we are trying to blow it out. Never seat your horn players so their bells face the tympani or bass drum! They will have problems with endurance and accuracy!
We are here to help. Horn playing is different and presents different challenges but once you understand them you'll be able to deal with them.
Common Problems and Some Solutions
Most of the problems you can fix from a podium boil down to one or two common and obvious mistakes. Poor posture, shallow breathing and poor timing are culprits in the vast majority of problems.
Poor posture makes efficient breathing difficult if not impossible, reduces mental clarity and shifts vital parts of the anatomy (abdomen, left hand, right hand, tongue, etc) into bad positions.
Shallow breathing is the pariah of horn playing. If you see a player take a gulping or snorting breath, correct them. Six Places is a really good simple way of teaching breathing, as is the Reverse Ho Ho Ho. A horn is the second longest instrument in the ensemble, with very narrow tubing and a small mouthpiece. If you don't have a lot of air in you you can't control the beast very well!
Hitting the wrong notes: As you go higher on any brass instrument the open notes get closer and closer together. Horns have a huge range and most of what we play is in the higher range. Our notes with the same fingerings are closer together than a trumpets and a lot closer together than on a low brass instrument.
You can stop and help them find the first notes of a phrase. Many times just finding the right partial to begin on helps a lot. If they continue to have trouble, be positive and suggest they follow a daily practice routine. Have them follow our Beginner Sample Practice Plan.
We also really like Erik Bolvin's Really Big Songbook for beginners and intermediate players. It is all common melodies. Many instrumental books have folk songs from around the world, some classical tunes and new compositions. The Really Big Songbook has tunes that are known to most kids so they can tell if they are playing the right notes.
The horn books in many band programs tend to move too high in the range too quickly. It can take years for a young student to be comfortable playing a note at the top of the staff. Our advice is let them take notes down and octave whenever needed.
Getting tired is a common problem. Our mouthpieces are tiny and we ask tiny muscles to do Herculean work every day. Horn players' chops do get tired more than other instruments.
You can work with your players to convince them they can leave an occasional note out to get some strength back. Horn parts for any level should not have long sections without breaks. Students and amateurs feel compelled to play every note on the page as if gospel; pros want to make the best music and if that means leaving some notes out - then that's what to do.
Many ensembles have a 'warm up' rehearsal right before the concert. Tell your horn players not to play! Why waste precious chop strength at a rehearsal?
Where they sit makes a lot of difference to horn players. Sometimes we forget that the bells face backwards. If we are blowing into soft curtains it is going to be tough to play loud. If we are in a big boomy room and have to play quietly it will present challenges.
But the worst is when there is something behind the horn player that is putting sound into the bell as we are trying to blow it out. Never seat your horn players so their bells face the tympani or bass drum! They will have problems with endurance and accuracy!
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