Pip Eastop – Hornplayer

baroque and classical period performance, contemporary, chamber music, symphonic, commercial sessions, jazz improvisation and free improvisation.

Where is your diaphragm?

July 29th, 2010  |  by Pippington  |  published in hornplaying, hornteaching

I know where mine is – and it’s nowhere near my belly. It goes above my stomach and my liver (they both tuck up under it, where it looks dark in the 2nd drawing) and my heart sits right on top of it, almost in the middle (the dotted line is the heart’s outline). Surprised? [...]

My hornplaying sucks

July 21st, 2008  |  by admin  |  published in hornplaying, hornteaching

What are your thoughts about breathing and breath control for hornplayers? Try summarising them to an imaginary class of gullible horn students. What do you hear yourself saying? Now, let me ask you how your thoughts about breathing and breath control might change if (in an imaginary world) you found it was possible to play [...]

Breathing (book excerpt)

September 21st, 1997  |  by admin  |  published in hornplaying, publications

The following text is extracted from “The Cambridge Companion to Brass Instruments” Edited by Trevor Herbert The Open University, Milton Keynes, 1997 John Wallace (ISBN-13: 9780521565226 | ISBN-10: 0521565227) Reproduced here with the permission of Cambridge University Press.   Breathing (page 201) Although the acquisition of good breathing technique is essential to brass playing, and [...]

The Diaphragm (book excerpt)

September 21st, 1997  |  by admin  |  published in hornplaying, hornteaching, publications

The following text is extracted from “The Cambridge Companion to Brass Instruments” Edited by Trevor Herbert The Open University, Milton Keynes, 1997 John Wallace (ISBN-13: 9780521565226 | ISBN-10: 0521565227) Reproduced here with the permission of Cambridge University Press. The diaphragm (pages 201-203)   The diaphragm is the principal muscle of inspiration – of the drawing in [...]

Some Ins and Outs of Breathing

September 18th, 1995  |  by admin  |  published in hornplaying, hornteaching, publications

Opening up the can of worms. Many wind players do very well with no thoughts at all about breathing, and there are plenty of others who do rather well despite adhering to completely absurd theories. There is much argument and confusion about the best way of using our internal bellows equipment for the purposes of [...]

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