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Embouchure (English: /ˈɒmbuˌʃʊər/ ) or
lipping is the use of the lips,
facial muscles, tongue, and
teeth in
playing a wind instrument. This
includes shaping...
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Embouchure collapse, "blowing one's chops" is a
generic term used by wind
instrument players to
describe a
variety of
conditions which result in the inability...
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playing the saxophone. It
includes how to hold the instrument, how the
embouchure is
formed and the
airstream produced, tone production,
hands and fingering...
- The double-lip
embouchure is a type of
embouchure used in
playing woodwind instruments like oboe and b****oon, and
occasionally clarinet and saxophone....
- has 12 mouths,
whereas a
concert hydraulophone typically has 45 mouths.
Embouchure is
controlled by way of the instrument's mouth, not the player's mouth...
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slackening the
embouchure given the same fingering. This is due to the serpent's
coupling of a "strong"
acoustical system of
embouchure and mouthpiece...
- of a note), lip (in jazz terminology, when
executed by
changing one's
embouchure on a wind instrument), plop, or
falling hail (a
glissando on a harp using...
- The single-lip
embouchure is a type of
embouchure used to play
clarinet and saxophone. It is
characterized by the
placement of
teeth and lips: the bottom...
- legato+vibrato, slurred)
Dynamics Trills (B4 to C5, B3 to C4, B2 to C3)
Embouchure bending B****oon reed
alone or
crowing Flutter tonguing Problems playing...
-
harmonic notes, and
pitch is
controlled entirely by
varying the air and
embouchure. See also
Clarion and
Natural trumpet The
English word
bugle comes from...