In Praise of Scales for Beginning Trumpet Players

Learning a variety of scales is essential for all successful instrumentalists. These are the building blocks of our music-making. It is never too early to start learning scales. In fact, it’s the perfect place to start! Why??

  • Almost all music is created with a limited collection of pitches. When these are arranged in order you get a scale!
  • Practicing scales builds the motor coordination needed to reliably produce pitches in musical time.
  • Scales help our ears connect with the different roles that each pitch plays within the context of a key.
  • Scales can be used to strategically extend range both higher and lower.
  • Even young students are able to play in many more keys than most teachers realize. This builds confidence and prepares them to approach keys with more sharps or flats without fear.
  • Once a student knows a scale, it can be used to develop any number of techniques when strategically varied, such as with articulation and dynamics.

In my teaching of beginning students, I start out with a five note scale from C to G. Once that is achieved, I add one note to the top, progressing slowly so as to develop a good sound and to discourage tension. It may take several weeks or months to play up to a full octave. That’s okay. I then use the Beginning Scale Sheet below to move students through several keys, developing both range and familiarity with different fingering combinations. 

A few other suggestions:

  • A steady tempo, no matter how slow, is essential for learning scales. Playing them out of time indicates poor motor control and renders them useless when applied to real music.
  • Pay attention to breathing. Encouraging students to play in one breath will promote reliable control of both the fingers and the air. This inevitably results in better sound production. At first, strive for just going up or just going down in one breath. Then, aim for up and down in one breath. Surprisingly simple goals like this provide excellent motivation for young students
  • Practice scales, first slurred and then tongued. Slurring eliminates the challenge of coordinating the tongue along with everything else. But articulation should be added soon so as to develop an immediate release of the air and coordination between tongue and fingers.
  • I use scales along with lip slurs to develop range in different ways. They also present two interrelated ways to approach the trumpet – one based on moving within a partial using valves and the other moving across partials with only the air and lips.

Unfortunately, many beginning band methods introduce only a narrow selection of keys and scales in the prioritization of other things. However, I find it incredibly empowering for students to learn multiple scales. It primes them for what is up next. If you really want to open up the doors for more repertoire, greater technique, and a true freedom of expression, scales are essential!

Secrets to Breathing Well on the Trumpet

1) Breathe through your mouth – You just can’t get enough air through your nose quickly enough.  Plus, in through the mouth sets up a reflex that is logically followed by exhalation through your mouth.

2) Breathe in time right before you play – At an early age, students should be taught to breathe in time right before they play.  Mark in breaths to breathe in time between phrases.

3) Your air has only two speeds, IN and OUT – Be careful not to stop the air between inhalation and exhalation.  It should feel a lot like a wind up and a pitch, throwing a ball with in one motion.  Stopping in the middle will often cause tension or obstruction.

4) Keep center of your lips on mouthpiece when breathing in – Dropping your jaw for a “big breath” or otherwise needlessly removing the mouthpiece from contact with your lips will delay the release of your air.  Even more importantly, if you don’t keep your lips close they will not be prepared to vibrate.  

5) Breathe in through corners of mouth – This goes along with the previous piece of advice.  I tell my student to imagine their lips are in the shape of a sideways figure eight or infinity symbol: ∞.  Lips are touching in the middle and corners relax to bring in air.  Notice this breath as a great example:

(Set playback speed to .25 to study the position of his lips on intake.)

6) Breathe in across your tongue – Practice this by breathing in while raising/moving forward the front half of your tongue enough to feel cold air rushing against past.  This provides something for the lungs to draw air against and sets up your tongue for an effective playing position in most registers.  It also prepares tongue to release the air immediately.  Without this, you may inadvertently close your throat, constricting the flow of air and creating a point of tension that is not helpful for playing.  Notice in this video how the player’s tongue comes forward for a good breath and to prepare for the subsequent articulation:

(Slow down playback for a closer look.)