The Ultimate Trumpet Podcast from TrumpetStudio

The Ultimate Trumpet Podcast - Episode 15: The Mouthpieces That Changed How I Play

18 min · 30. maj 2026
episode The Ultimate Trumpet Podcast - Episode 15: The Mouthpieces That Changed How I Play cover

Beskrivelse

In Episode 15 of The Ultimate Trumpet Podcast, Adam and Bella explore one of the most historically rich articles ever published on TrumpetStudio.com [http://TrumpetStudio.com] — Michael Droste's deep dive into the mouthpieces that have shaped his playing over decades. This is not a beginner's guide to mouthpiece selection. It's part history lesson, part masterclass, and part personal confession about the equipment, legends, and missed opportunities that define a serious trumpet life. The episode covers a Bach 1C screw rim hybrid with a Schilke-machined 1CH rim reportedly built to Adolph Herseth's specifications — a piece that demands proper air, real support, and a commitment to sound that changes how you play even after you put it down. Adam and Bella discuss what made Herseth's fifty-three-year tenure as CSO principal trumpet so extraordinary, and what the 1C itself asks of any player who picks it up. The conversation then turns to Arnold Jacobs — principal tubist of the Chicago Symphony from 1944 to 1988, and arguably the most influential brass pedagogue of the 20th century. Michael owns three items from Jacobs' personal collection: the Schilke Air Teaching Aid, the Mouthpiece Visualizer (full shank, no cup — a window into the embouchure that no standard mouthpiece can provide), and a wooden French horn mouthpiece. The episode explores Jacobs' "song and wind" methodology, why the Clarke Technical Studies could get you in trouble in his studio, and what it meant — and still means — to have the chance to study with someone like that and walk away from it. Michael didn't take that lesson. Adam and Bella talk honestly about why that kind of regret matters, and what players can learn from it. The episode then covers the GR Droste #4 — a custom mouthpiece built directly from Ronald Romm's documented program specifications (Program 1056, #1-7272 BB, GR Classic Blank), confirmed in writing by GR Mouthpieces. Rim 64ID, M cup, .078 volume, GR 27 bore, finished in gold plate. Not inspired by Romm's playing — built from the same geometric blueprint GR used when Romm himself ordered his piece. The episode also covers the Schilke Droste custom: a shallow body 10a4z with Zinger backbore, built for maximum upper register efficiency in the tradition of Bill Chase. Throughout the conversation, a Chicago thread connects everything — Herseth and Jacobs both anchored at the CSO, Schilke operating in the same world, all of it concentrated in one city during the decades that defined American brass playing. The episode closes on the article's central argument: equipment is information, not identity. Great players don't succeed because of their mouthpieces. What these pieces carry is context — the stories of the players connected to them, and what those stories still have to teach. Resources mentioned in this episode: • The Ultimate Warm Up for Trumpet • The Ultimate Technical Study for Trumpet • The Ultimate Wedding Book for Trumpet If you enjoy the podcast, be sure to download the Trumpet Studio - Learn to Play app on the App Store.

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episode The Ultimate Trumpet Podcast - Episode 20: Trumpet Valve Oil Showdown — What Actually Matters and What's Marketing cover

The Ultimate Trumpet Podcast - Episode 20: Trumpet Valve Oil Showdown — What Actually Matters and What's Marketing

In Episode 20 of The Ultimate Trumpet Podcast, Adam and Bella cut through the marketing noise around valve oil and get into the real chemistry, the manufacturer specs, and fifty years of playing experience behind the petroleum versus synthetic debate. Based on Michael Droste's Studio Notes article "Trumpet Valve Oil Showdown — What Actually Matters and What's Marketing" from TrumpetStudio.com, this episode covers everything from PAO molecular structure to cold-weather gig performance to the one universal recommendation that matters more than any product choice. This is a gear episode with real depth — not a product review, but a chemistry-grounded framework for making smart decisions about what goes on your valves and why. What We Cover in This Episode: * The Six Oils Worth Knowing — Al Cass Fast, Blue Juice, Hetman #2, Ultra-Pure Regular, Yamaha Synthetic, and Roche Thomas Premium. What each one actually is, what it's designed to do, and who it's right for. Plus why per-ounce cost matters more than sticker price. * The Chemistry: What's Actually Different — Petroleum vs. PAO synthetic is a real molecular difference, not marketing language. Two inherent limitations of petroleum — temperature sensitivity and oxidation — explained clearly, and why synthetic oils were engineered to solve both. * What Manufacturer Specs Actually Tell Us — Hetman's viscosity grading system, Ultra-Pure's PAO base claim, Yamaha's tolerance-match formulation, and Blue Juice's cleaning agents — what each claim actually means versus what it sounds like. * The Tolerance Variable That Changes Everything — The performance gap between synthetic and petroleum is not the same on every horn. Modern tight-tolerance instruments versus vintage looser-tolerance horns require a completely different calculation. This is the factor almost no valve oil review ever covers. * The Cold Temperature Reality — The clearest, most chemistry-grounded advantage synthetic holds. If you've ever had sluggish valves at a cold outdoor gig and blamed yourself, there's a real chance the oil was the problem. Three specific playing situations where this matters most. * The Residue and Maintenance Question — The "petroleum gums up valves" claim is true under specific conditions. Understanding the oxidation timeline changes the practical recommendation considerably — and honest self-assessment about cleaning frequency is the key variable. * Sorting Real Claims from the Hype — Seven of the most common valve oil marketing claims evaluated one by one: partially true, overstated, true, unverifiable. A plain-language verdict on each. * The Practical Verdict — Three specific situations with specific product recommendations. Modern precision horn in cold conditions. Vintage horn with looser tolerances. Budget as the primary constraint. And the one rule that applies regardless of what you choose. Key Takeaway: The oil debate is real — the chemistry is real, the cold-temperature performance difference is real, the residue difference is real. But cleaning frequency matters more than oil chemistry. A horn cleaned monthly with petroleum will outperform a horn cleaned twice a year with the finest synthetic available. The maintenance habit is the foundation. Everything else is built on top of it.

25. juni 202628 min
episode The Ultimate Trumpet Podcast - Episode 19: Adolph Herseth and the Chicago Sound cover

The Ultimate Trumpet Podcast - Episode 19: Adolph Herseth and the Chicago Sound

In Episode 19 of The Ultimate Trumpet Podcast, Adam and Bella dig into one of the most legendary figures in orchestral brass history: Adolph "Bud" Herseth, principal trumpet of the Chicago Symphony Orchestra for 53 years. Based on Michael Droste's article "Adolph Herseth and the Chicago Sound: What Made His Tone Unmistakable" from TrumpetStudio.com, this episode goes well beyond the mythology to look at what Herseth actually did, what he actually taught, and what players at every level can take from his approach. Michael Droste was part of the Chicago brass world during the years Herseth was still actively playing and attended a Herseth master class in person. What's in this episode isn't secondhand legend — it's the real story from someone who was there. What We Cover in This Episode: * What the Chicago Sound Actually Was — Not just loud. Core density, cross-register evenness, and command. The distinction between a sound defined by size and a sound defined by character — and why that difference matters. * The Physical Foundation — Why Herseth was reluctant to talk mechanics, and what we can piece together anyway: a firm but non-rigid embouchure, no high-pressure squeezing in the upper register, and air use that connected directly to Arnold Jacobs' "Song and Wind" philosophy. * Air as the Engine — The single most important technical principle behind Herseth's playing. The embouchure doesn't produce sound — the air does. Players who reverse that priority are working against the instrument. * The Mouthpiece Story — Herseth's famous Bach 1C / Schilke hybrid, the "1CH" screw-rim design Michael Droste owns, and the crucial lesson about why hunting for a legendary player's mouthpiece is almost always the wrong move. * What He Said at the Master Class — Thinking in phrases, not notes. Music telling the body what to do, not the other way around. Two ideas from one afternoon that are worth writing down. * The Tuba Mouthpiece Warmdown — The post-concert practice Herseth recommended to new CSO players. The kind of practical knowledge that lives inside professional orchestras and doesn't make it into method books. * The Larger Legacy — What a 53-year career at the highest level actually demonstrates about technique, musicianship, and what the trumpet can sound like when everything is working. Key Takeaway: Technique is in service of music — not the other way around. Everything Herseth did physically was oriented toward a musical result. He was never practicing technique for its own sake. He was always practicing music. That's the lesson that doesn't age. Practical Takeaways for the Practice Room: 1. Think in phrases, not notes. The instrument will pull your attention toward individual events — actively work against that. 2. Let the music determine the physical approach, not the reverse. Start with the phrase and its character, and let the body follow the imagination. 3. Keep the air moving through the horn, not pushed against the mouthpiece. There's a difference you can hear. 4. Warm down after intense playing. A few minutes of buzzing on a large mouthpiece at low resistance helps the lip tissue release tension and recover more completely. 5. Be skeptical of gear as a solution. The mouthpiece serves the sound. It doesn't create it. Resources Mentioned in This Episode: * The Ultimate Warm Up Book for Trumpet * The Ultimate Technical Study for Trumpet * The Ultimate Wedding Book for Trumpet All available at TrumpetStudio.com.

20. juni 202612 min
episode The Ultimate Trumpet Podcast - Episode 18: What Arnold Jacobs Actually Said About Breathing — And What Got Distorted cover

The Ultimate Trumpet Podcast - Episode 18: What Arnold Jacobs Actually Said About Breathing — And What Got Distorted

In Episode 18 of The Ultimate Trumpet Podcast, Adam and Bella take on one of the most sacred and most misunderstood names in brass pedagogy: Arnold Jacobs. Based on Michael Droste's article "What Arnold Jacobs Actually Said About Breathing — And What Got Distorted" from TrumpetStudio.com, this episode traces how a sophisticated, scientifically grounded body of teaching got reduced to a two-word slogan — and what players and teachers have been missing ever since. What We Cover in This Episode: * The Man Before the Myth — Forty-four years with the Chicago Symphony, scientific equipment in the teaching studio, and collaboration with pulmonologists. The real Jacobs was a rigorous empiricist, not a slogan-generator. * "Song and Wind" Was a Corrective, Not a Prescription — Jacobs coined the concept to push back against players who over-analyzed mechanics. It was never meant as a universal teaching principle for every player in every situation. * The Air Volume vs. Air Pressure Distinction Nobody Talks About — Jacobs was a proponent of a full reservoir, not high-pressure blowing. The garden hose vs. fire hose analogy explains exactly what he meant — and what the "use more air" crowd got backwards. * The Embouchure Question — Jacobs was skeptical of embouchure-obsessive teaching, but he absolutely addressed real embouchure problems when they existed. The myth that he didn't believe in embouchure work has done genuine damage in studios. * The Neurological Piece Nobody Mentions — The most underrepresented part of Jacobs' teaching: he understood habit formation at the level of the nervous system. Every repetition grooves a pattern. Sloppy repetition grooves the wrong one. * What Jacobs Was Actually Like as a Teacher — Not one-size-fits-all. A master diagnostician who prescribed different things to different players based on precise observation. The players who benefited most walked away with something specific, not a phrase. Key Takeaway: The simplified version of Jacobs' teaching works for some players in some situations — but it was never meant to be universal. The full version is more nuanced, more demanding, and far more useful than the version that's been circulating for forty years. Practical Takeaways for the Practice Room: 1. Practice with musical intention from the first note of the warm-up — give the nervous system something musical to organize around. 2. Keep the air reservoir full, not pressurized. The tank matters; the blast doesn't. 3. If you have a real mechanical problem, address it directly and efficiently — then let it go. Jacobs wasn't against technique work. He was against neurotic obsession with it. 4. Take repetition seriously. You are training your nervous system every time you pick up the horn. Mental engagement during practice is the mechanism, not the bonus. 5. Be skeptical of anyone who reduces a great teacher's ideas to a phrase. Resources Mentioned in This Episode: * The Ultimate Warm Up Book for Trumpet * The Ultimate Technical Study for Trumpet * The Ultimate Wedding Book for Trumpet All available at TrumpetStudio.com. If you enjoy the podcast, be sure to download the Trumpet Studio - Learn to Play app on the App Store. Now go practice!!

15. juni 202620 min
episode The Ultimate Trumpet Podcast - Episode 17: Long Tones: Are They Actually Worth Your Practice Time? cover

The Ultimate Trumpet Podcast - Episode 17: Long Tones: Are They Actually Worth Your Practice Time?

Are long tones the sacred foundation of trumpet practice — or are most players just going through the motions? In this episode, Adam and Bella dig into one of the most talked-about and least-questioned exercises in brass playing. Based on the TrumpetStudio.com [http://TrumpetStudio.com] article by Michael Droste (“drah-stee”), this episode breaks down when long tones genuinely work, where they fall short, and the version almost nobody teaches that will completely change how you use them. What’s Covered The traditional case for long tones, and why the argument is only half the story. The real variable that determines whether long tones help or hurt your development — and it has nothing to do with how long you hold the note. Why most players are on full autopilot the moment they start a long tone, and what focused practice actually looks and sounds like. The four situations where long tones legitimately earn their place in a practice session: warming up cold chops, resetting a fatigued sound, intonation training with a drone or tuner, and dynamic control work. Why long tones can’t train the attack — the most important moment of any note. The full-range chromatic long tone exercise that exposes exactly where your tone breaks down and where your real development work needs to happen. Key Takeaway Ten minutes of focused, intentional long tones beats thirty minutes of distracted sustaining every time. The upgrade isn’t more long tones — it’s better ones. Resources Mentioned The Ultimate Warm Up Book for Trumpet — TrumpetStudio.com [http://TrumpetStudio.com] The Ultimate Technical Study for Trumpet — TrumpetStudio.com [http://TrumpetStudio.com] The Ultimate Wedding Book for Trumpet — TrumpetStudio.com [http://TrumpetStudio.com] Full article: TrumpetStudio.com [http://TrumpetStudio.com] About The Ultimate Trumpet Podcast Hosted by Adam and Bella. Deep technical breakdowns, practical advice, and real talk for trumpet players at every level. New episodes every week. Based on articles by Michael Droste at TrumpetStudio.com [http://TrumpetStudio.com].

10. juni 202611 min
episode The Ultimate Trumpet Podcast - Episode 16: Choosing Your First Pro Horn — What Specs Actually Matter cover

The Ultimate Trumpet Podcast - Episode 16: Choosing Your First Pro Horn — What Specs Actually Matter

In Episode 15 of The Ultimate Trumpet Podcast, Adam and Bella tackle one of the most high-stakes decisions a developing trumpet player faces: buying your first professional horn. Based on Michael Droste's article "Choosing Your First Pro Horn — What Specs Actually Matter" from TrumpetStudio.com, they cut through the noise of brand reputation, endorsements, and forum arguments to explain what the specs on the tag actually mean — and which ones will genuinely affect how you play. The core message is simple and important: most players buy a pro horn without fully understanding what they're buying. This episode changes that. What We Cover in This Episode: * Bore Size: The real difference between medium-large (.459") and large (.462") bores — how resistance, slotting, air efficiency, and tone color each respond differently, and why bigger doesn't mean better. * Bell Material & Construction: What yellow brass, gold brass, and rose brass actually do to your tone, plus why one-piece bell construction matters more than most buyers realize. * The Leadpipe — The Most Underrated Component: Why this short, unremarkable section of tubing shapes how the horn responds from the first note, and why it's often the first variable to investigate when something feels off. * Valve Action: What to look for in the shop — speed, consistency, and return — and why a great valve disappears during playing. * Intonation Tendencies: How to test a horn's natural pitch center against your own, and which partials to check before you commit to a purchase. * What To Ignore: Finish, weight, country of manufacture, and endorsements — and the appropriate level of analysis for each. The Test That Actually Matters: After all the spec analysis, Adam and Bella land on the only evaluation that counts: play the horn on real music, in real musical contexts, for an extended period of time. The horn that gets out of the way and lets you play is the right one. Resources Mentioned in This Episode: * The Ultimate Warm Up for Trumpet * The Ultimate Technical Study for Trumpet * The Ultimate Wedding Book for Trumpet All available at TrumpetStudio.com. If you enjoy the podcast, be sure to download the Trumpet Studio - Learn to Play app on the App Store. Now go practice!!

4. juni 202611 min