I started BE in the spring of 2006. At that time, my dream was to acquire the ability to play the full range of the horn with ease. I believed if I could do that, everything else would eventually fall into place with enough practice. I remember writing to Jeff Smiley, "If this works for me, I'm going to tell my old horn professor about it," because nothing he and I tried helped me improve my range and endurance. After my sophomore year, I dropped out of university music school in 1973 feeling defeated. Some 30+ years later, I decided to give horn playing another try.
Now, after nearly six years of studying BE, my dream of having command of the full range of the instrument has been realized. I have the range to play any note in the literature and any horn part for a very long time before tiring. (That's not to say I can play any part, just the range needed for any note of any part!) For example, after performing 1st horn on Beethoven's 7th, my chops still felt "fresh." Having good range and endurance frees me to focus on the many other aspects of horn playing such as tone, phrasing, technique, etc.
Ten months after I began studying The Balanced Embouchure, seeing that BE really "worked" I had another dream, to share BE with the horn world. I wanted all horn players with a desire to improve their embouchures to know that there's a simple method available that not only promises, but delivers results. (See Christain Hansen's testimonial here.) I wanted to tell them that this method works without the drudgery of slaving away for hours a day on strength building exercises. This method is technique driven and is mastered by practicing a few exercises that are so simple, kids can do them.
I especially wanted to share this message with college students who may be struggling with embouchure issues like I did. I am very happy to see my dream come true as college level horn students and instructors from all over the globe are now studying BE. In addition, there are now high school and middle school band directors teaching BE as part of their brass instruction.
What I never dreamed of in my BEginnings was to see professional horn players embrace BE for their own use. That was a complete surprise to me. I naively assumed that all professional horn players had perfectly balanced chops so had no need for BE. I was wrong and have enjoyed seeing a substantial number of pro's embrace BE for their own benefit. I've even had the pleasure of seeing a couple who had thrown in the towel on professional performing due to embouchure issues, but return to it joyfully! (Search my blog for testimonials of professional horn players who use BE: Andrew Joy, Dave Stoller, Steve Park, Sandra Clarke, John Ericson, Julia Rose, Hans Christian, Alex Shuhan....)
This gives me a great feeling of satisfaction and accomplishment to have my dreams come true.
Valerie Wells
Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Tuesday, February 14, 2012
The Amazing Steve Park!
Thursday, February 2, 2012
Tough to Squeak & Feedback from Dan
It's long been a mystery to me how the Roll Out exercises (RO) could improve the upper register. It seems counter intuitive, but time and time again I get feedback of BE students claiming significant improvements in their upper register as well as the mid and low by practicing RO. I've come to accept the idea that whatever improves the embouchure will improve every aspect of it's performance. The following is an exchange I had with JB, a newbee to BE. Following this, I received insightful feedback from Dan whose experience is typical for BE students.
JP: The books and CD arrived safely. Roll out was easy - always had a pretty good low register.
Valerie Wells
Val: This is typical for horn players. RO is usually easy for most of us.
JP: Have been doing lip clamps. So far no lengthy squeak! Rats. If I get a squeak it lasts only two or three seconds, and definitely does not keep going if I put the horn to my lips - even gently. The sound I am getting in the horn sounds more like something dying.
Val: LOL! This is normal and expected. Some people can squeak beautifully, others can't. It doesn't matter. What does matter is this: first, you learn to roll your lips in and second, you learn to keep them rolled in while you blow air through them. The sound is less important than the technique and motion you will learn from practicing the exercise.
As you persist in this exercise, you will eventually learn how to keep your lips rolled in and produce a tone with the mouthpiece applied. The first tones are never beautiful. They oft times are messy with multiple buzz points. That's okay. It's only an exercise. Even now, after doing BE for 5 1/2 years, some days my RI exercises don't sound clear.... but I remember to tell myself, it's only an exercise. I have progressed very satisfactorily in spite of my not-so-pretty lip clamp squeaks and RI exercises.
JP: Has anyone else experienced no results after two days?
Val: Are you kidding? People struggle with this for weeks and months and work for years to perfect it. Don't worry. You're right on schedule.
JP: I'm hoping lip clamps will eventually provide enough strength to get a good squeak going.
Val: There's a little "strength" involved, but mostly executing the lip clamp squeak and the RI exercises is a matter of learning a technique that you will eventually be able to wrap your brain around.
JP: I majored in horn in college during the 50s, but could never develop the high register enough to consider a performance career. Did a career without playing horn, then, at age 72, took it up again after 50 years, bought an early Elkhart 8D, and now play in (location withheld). I like 4th horn just fine, but darn, I want endurance and a high register. I'm counting on BE.
Val: As you persist doing these exercises with extreme lip shapes, you will learn (both consciously and unconsciously) to "borrow" bits and pieces from these positions of RI and RO that can be applied to your regular playing to improve your range and endurance. Trust me, it works! :o) BE will deliver, but it takes time, persistence and patience.
Hang in there, you will succeed!
Warm regards,
Dan's Feed Back
Dear Valerie,
I would like to tell you of my experiences with BE.
I have been working my way very slowly through the exercises and have not progressed beyond RI and RO 3. I've worked on them intensively but sporadically for about 6 months but I can now say that I have noticed great improvements in the strength of my high register.
For some time I did not see any progress but I kept the faith and it seems to have paid off. It may be of interest to some students that the exercises that made most of the difference were the ROLL OUTS! I had assumed that I needed to work on Roll Ins for my high register but this was not so. For some reason the roll outs were much more effective for me. Of course I still do the Roll ins but it was the Roll Outs that enabled me to do the Roll Ins. [Italics added.]
Regards
Dan DeWitt
Wednesday, January 18, 2012
Truth Passes Through Three Stages
Arthur Schopenhauer, the German philosopher (1788 -- 1860), wrote:
"All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed. Second, it is violently opposed. Third, it is accepted as being self-evident."
I believe The Balanced Embouchure method is approaching stage three. I am glad I haven't been "violently opposed" as I've promoted BE, but anyone who has followed this little saga since the spring 2007 can not deny that I've been opposed with vigor and venom! There remain only a few who openly ridicule me for what I do. However, The Balanced Embouchure for horn is now used by over 237 French horn players on every continent, except perhaps Antarctica. It's exciting and satisfying to be a part of this.
Jeff Smiley is making a significant and positive contribution to brass pedagogy.
(Update in 12/23/13: I stopped counting a about a year ago when the number of French horn players using BE passed 320.)
Tuesday, December 13, 2011
BE Update from Julia Rose
Julia Rose has written a BE Update on her blog. Julia reports what I often hear from Balanced Embouchure students, that they return from a vacation with unexpectedly well functioning chops. She also articulates the finer details of how BE benefits her playing. I've seen other horn players "catch on" to BE very quickly like Julia has, but I've never seen anyone articulate the message with the same comprehensive clarity.
Here are a few excerpts that I found particularly impressive:
Here are a few excerpts that I found particularly impressive:
Ironically, the weirdness of the different embouchure sensations allows me to tune out how things feel and instead focus on what I want to sound like. The vast differences between the RI and RO embouchures have fine tuned my regular embouchure, making it more streamlined, with no unnecessary movement. The overall effect has been very freeing.Thank you, Julia Rose for sharing your BE experience.
The TOL exercises have been especially groundbreaking for me. They have reminded me of the importance of tongue position in ease of range and tone color, along with articulation, and now I have another tool to work on those techniques.
Overall, I’ve been thrilled at the results I’m getting from BE, which I was not expecting at all. The exercises are fun, challenging, efficient and mercifully brief, allowing me more time to work on what I really care about in my practice sessions.
Friday, October 28, 2011
Feedback From a Horn Teacher
Jane Swanson, a retired schoolteacher who teaches privately and plays horn in San Luis Obispo, contributed an article to the latest issue of "The Horn Call." She reports impressions of attending her first IHS horn symposium in June of this year. Here is what Jane wrote regarding BE:
Steven Park's Roll Out Workshops: BE: The Balanced Embouchure Method, presented by Valerie Wells with Stephen Park. This workshop presented an approach to embouchure development that was 100% new to me. Valerie and Stephen demonstrated the exercises up close and personal, which was essential because I had no idea it was legal or possible, let alone beneficial, to do such odd things with a face. I had only two choices: write them off as nuts or try it. Given Valerie's stunning demonstrations of producing super high, pianissimo, pure pitches out of thin air, and given Stephen's gorgeous sound and security as a performer (search for Steve Park to find some lovely video performances), I chose the latter. And sure enough, the BE exercises do not demand the dreaded "embouchure change" but do lead to embouchure improvement in all registers. I recommend their website (beforhorn.blogspot.com) as a source of information for those not at the workshop.
Steven Park's Roll In
Jane emailed me to add a little more information regarding her progress:
My own progress with BE is hmmm..... maybe modest is the word but maybe not. I still don't squeak well - can't do what you do with those high sounds without and with the horn. But I am pretty consistent with the basics of roll-out and roll-in. And my endurance is still a work in progress. But here are my pay-offs:1. Even when I play to exhaustion I do NOT have swollen lips afterwards or the next day! So I can jump right back into action.2. In the midst of challenging playing, same story - my chops recover if I give them a few seconds off. That was not the case previously.I am combining BE work with a focus on using air better, meaning those things we KNOW but which can slip away over time if we take them for granted:monitoring speed of airusing more of itusing that low gut support every secondFor me the combination is paying off nicely, and I know that more progress lies in my future.
Thanks for the feedback, Jane. This ability to recover more quickly is something I hear often from those who study BE. See the discussion on Julia Rose's blog about this.
Friday, October 14, 2011
The Rule Breakers
Alexander Kienle recently shared a couple items that I find very interesting:
Baborak bunches his chin up as he ascends for the last note of Don Juan.
http://www.youtube.com/watch? v=Cc-S02MX4mU
Interesting to watch! And what a grand moment in classical music to savor. Does it get any better than this?
Some of you may have already come across Froydis' article about "nevers": http://www.hornsociety.org/en/ publications/horn-call/online- articles/194-never-say-never- again As Alex pointed out, this is particularly relevant when discussing BE!
With examples like these, it's hard to see how some believe bunching the chin or puffing the cheeks is "bad" or even "damaging" to the embouchure.
Baborak bunches his chin up as he ascends for the last note of Don Juan.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
Interesting to watch! And what a grand moment in classical music to savor. Does it get any better than this?
Some of you may have already come across Froydis' article about "nevers": http://www.hornsociety.org/en/
With examples like these, it's hard to see how some believe bunching the chin or puffing the cheeks is "bad" or even "damaging" to the embouchure.
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