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Birmingham Conservatoire

The Green Hornet

by Matt on March 13, 2008

It’s been a long time coming, but now (finally) I have a short video that you can watch of me in action.

The video is taken from the Orchestra I created for the “Sound Ideas” Project a year ago. The piece is The Green Hornet from the movie Kill Bill (and originally I think from a Bruce Lee Movie of the same name). Dave Livesey is conducting and the venue is the Adrian Boult Hall at the Birmingham Conservatoire.

The Orchestra is great and I might add a taster of the rest of the concert in the near future.

The Orchestra had 5 2hour Rehearsals which we crammed 50 people into a lecture room to accomplish. In reality after the set up we had a total of 9 hours to rehearse 40 mins of music. The result is fantastic as you will see.

It was a first for me to stand up as a soloist in front of an orchestra and also to performing from memory but apart from a couple of corners that I wish I could redo it sounds pretty good. It was also really great fun!!

 

So here it is, and please post your thoughts on;

The Green Hornet, Performed by Myself and the Sound Ideas Film Orchestra

 

 

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Standard Strad

by Matt on November 15, 2007

I went to the Birmingham Conservatoire playing on my Callichio Trumpet this was not only a great trumpet that suited the way I played but was another characteristic that set me apart from the other players, who all played, you guessed it!!! Bach Strad’s.

After a year of being told I should be playing this “standard trumpet” by the head of brass, my first teacher and most of the people giving master classes I eventually had enough. So when I said the phrase “I’ll play a Strad. if you give me the money for one” I thought that would be the end of it. Unfortunately it was. But not quite how I’d anticipated. The result was that I was given a grant for a trumpet?!

The double-edged sword of, “this is great!! a free trumpet!” and “oh crap, now I have to play a Strad.” was the start of my three-year affair of playing this trumpet.

The advice you might get with this particular make of trumpet is usually polar. That is to say you’ll have the players who swear by them and those who hate them. As I was forced on one I think that I have a good perspective.

Like someone forced to live with a person they don’t really like but who know the only way to get through is to grit your teeth and just get along.

Positive

Ideal to study on for a trumpet player with classical aspirations. It has a round clear tone (a little on the bright side) with a clear range from bottom G (below the stave) to top C (above the stave).

And The Rest

If you are aware either through secret experimentation or rumours of some bloke called Mayonnaise Ferguson (or something) that there are notes above top C that can be reached without aid of a piccolo trumpet this is not the trumpet for you.

Before I used this trumpet I had a solid range up to top F (yes, above top C - lots of people can get it but not many on Strad’s.). After C the resistance very quickly becomes like wading through treacle and the slotting is reduced so much that blinking will cause you to slip the harmonic.

Needless to say my upper register declined over 3 years of practice and I’ve only recently managed to build it back and start increasing it (using my Callichio).

There are other flaws in this trumpet as well but these are mostly in its flexibility.

Evaluation

This is a trumpet made and ideal for orchestral, chamber and middle of the road solo playing (this is why most classical trumpet players will play the 3rd movement of the Haydn on the Eb Trumpet. The Bb Strad simply bottles it on the top Eb).

It is a simple horn with no bells and whistles. This means that it doesn’t enhance any attributes of your playing and limits any strengths that you have which lay outside the realms of the classical genre.

This is perhaps why the powers that be in colleagues might put on the pressure for you to play one. In this was they can churn out trumpet clones all of similar abilities and all equally unemployable when they graduate.

The best way to describe this trumpet is as the simply Standard Strad

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Matt’s Opening Blog

by Matt on November 14, 2007

So you might ask what a young professional trumpet player at the start of his career would write in his first blog?

Well to find out just read on.

As you might have gathered from my site so far I am Matt Roberts - and not that fitness and vitamin supplement bloke who’s tarnishing my name - but the professional musician.

This site has been set up as a live link to my developing career and also as a place to discuss, music (written, recorded and performed), trumpets and anything else that might come up along the way.

I intend to keep this site regularly updated but until I get going here’s a brief taster of where I’ve come form:

A few of my past experiences include performing in front of the queen and 20,000 spectators in Pride Park (Derby), recording at Abbey Road, playing principle trumpet for the CBSO youth (conducted by Sakari Oramo) and playing lead for one of the charts when MYJO won the Dutch National Big Band competition).

I play on a Callichio Ultra Heavy-Weight trumpet, and also own a Jerome Callet Soloist (that I played for many years), a Bach Strad. (which I probably won’t own for much longer), and Couesnon flugelhorn. I play on 2 mouthpieces at the moment (as although I don’t like the idea of this, it is necessary), which are a standard, Bach 1-1/2c and a GR 65ES for my lead stuff. As I play a great number of styles it isn’t appropriate to play on my lead in an orchestra and I don’t have the cutting edge in a big band on the classical Bach.

I’ve spent the last 4 years studying at The Birmingham Conservatoire of Music and now have entered the professional world.

I am currently in Liverpool playing lead for LIPA’s (Liverpool Institution of Performing Arts) Musical Show; My Favourite Year.

So there we have it, a bit on who I am, where I come from and what I’m doing for the opening blog of my site. I hope that any young professionals may find it a useful place to visit and/or discuss some issues with, trumpet players can add their thoughts on particular instruments etc and that anyone else will find something of interest here.

Enjoy…

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