bravo, bravo frank! love the way u bend pitches in a subtle sorta way and the way your bridging the melody lines with what would(originally) be the accompaniment line played on guitar. pure music expression my friend, thank!
Your playing posture is very unconventional, would you normally play like this had the microphone been positioned differently? Either way you have a great sound and obvious talent. Perhaps more proof that success doesn't have to come from playing "by the book" so to speak.
Thanks, Steve. If you look around a bit, you will see that some fine players need to angle downward, sometimes sharply, in order to play their best. (See Sergei Nakarjakov, for example.) I wrote a book about trumpet technique and teach the trumpet for a living, so I know the subject well, but decades of trial and error has led me to this place. For now, that's how it looks when I am playing my best...
Thanks! That's the idea behind the project: to distill a piece to its essence. The trumpet can only play one note at a time, but like a pen and ink drawing, a single line can suggest a great deal. Choosing what to play out of all of the possible notes is the art of it. Playing the trumpet constantly without rest is the hardest part!
bravo, bravo frank! love the way u bend pitches in a subtle sorta way and the way your bridging the melody lines with what would(originally) be the accompaniment line played on guitar. pure music expression my friend, thank!
ertatta 11 months ago
@ertatta Many thanks! I have dozens of these little pieces worked up--I'll record them one of these days.
FrankGabrielCampos 11 months ago
Your playing posture is very unconventional, would you normally play like this had the microphone been positioned differently? Either way you have a great sound and obvious talent. Perhaps more proof that success doesn't have to come from playing "by the book" so to speak.
SteveHatchfield 2 years ago
Thanks, Steve. If you look around a bit, you will see that some fine players need to angle downward, sometimes sharply, in order to play their best. (See Sergei Nakarjakov, for example.) I wrote a book about trumpet technique and teach the trumpet for a living, so I know the subject well, but decades of trial and error has led me to this place. For now, that's how it looks when I am playing my best...
FrankGabrielCampos 2 years ago
Thanks! That's the idea behind the project: to distill a piece to its essence. The trumpet can only play one note at a time, but like a pen and ink drawing, a single line can suggest a great deal. Choosing what to play out of all of the possible notes is the art of it. Playing the trumpet constantly without rest is the hardest part!
FrankGabrielCampos 2 years ago
very nice! I actually like the way that the piano accompaniment is incorporated into the instrumental line...
torosax 2 years ago
Inspirationally motivating stuff. D Parks sent us here. Kudos aplenty!
orphamay 2 years ago
Such beautiful tone. This is a wonderful piece. Something that all aspiring trumpet players should hear. You gotta like this!
Jazz4Joe 3 years ago
Professor Campos is a remarkable trumpet player. His tone, technique, range, and clarity are the finest I've ever heard.
LouisRosendoMarquez 3 years ago