Tutorials
Shop
Supporting special needs music education
About
Forum guide
Rules
Support the Café fundraising
Mailing List
Pete Thomas
Forums
Forum list
Start a discussion
🎷 Saxophone Discussion
📖 Articles
Tutorials
More info
Saxophone Info
Beginners
Beginners impro
Impro & Theory
Mouthpieces
Saxophone Effects
Improve your Tone
Patterns & Exercises
Shop
NEW
Unfiltered
Latest activity
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Search
Search titles only
Note
By:
Forum list
Start a discussion
🎷 Saxophone Discussion
📖 Articles
Menu
Log in
Register
How to install the app
How to install the app on iOS
NB: For Safari start at step 2
(Firefox only) Tap on the hamburger menu at bottom right
Tap on the share icon
(bottom of page)
Scroll down and tap on
Add to Home Screen:
Note:
This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Forums
🎷 Main Discussion 🎷
Saxophones: gear, playing, repair, impro
Flutter Tongue.
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
<blockquote data-quote="jeremyjuicewah" data-source="post: 324858" data-attributes="member: 1198"><p>I recognise this. A few weeks after I got my first Chinese alto my teacher told me "you sound like a duck". We worked on subtone and I got it quite quickly. At school, my music teacher was very old school and his opinion of the guitar was that it was not a musical instrument at all. Just a nuisance which would soon go away as long as no one paid it any attention. I played guitar back then. I met him years later and he was an amusing and intelligent guy and not at all the *****ole I had thought him. He died not long after we met up and I expect he still held his views on guitar. I didnt ask him, there was too much other ground to cover in finding out what it was like to teach in an all boys sec mod in the bursting days of the 1960s. I imagine that it was pretty good training for where he has probably ended up.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="jeremyjuicewah, post: 324858, member: 1198"] I recognise this. A few weeks after I got my first Chinese alto my teacher told me "you sound like a duck". We worked on subtone and I got it quite quickly. At school, my music teacher was very old school and his opinion of the guitar was that it was not a musical instrument at all. Just a nuisance which would soon go away as long as no one paid it any attention. I played guitar back then. I met him years later and he was an amusing and intelligent guy and not at all the *****ole I had thought him. He died not long after we met up and I expect he still held his views on guitar. I didnt ask him, there was too much other ground to cover in finding out what it was like to teach in an all boys sec mod in the bursting days of the 1960s. I imagine that it was pretty good training for where he has probably ended up. [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes…
Verification
Post reply
Forums
🎷 Main Discussion 🎷
Saxophones: gear, playing, repair, impro
Flutter Tongue.
Back
Top
Bottom