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Lesson time: (8min 52sec)
Nat McIntosh de la Youngblood Brass Band habla del papel del sousafón en una banda de metales, además de las tres reglas que, según él, todo sousafonista debería seguir.
This lesson is part of the course Musicalidad e improvisación de brass band con Youngblood
Watch this lesson for free below.
Lesson transcript:
Greetings, Internet sousaphone brass band enthusiasts!
My name is Nat Macintosh, and welcome to Nat's Rules, starring Nat MacIntosh and Nat McIntosh joint. I am, of course, the sousaphone player with the Youngblood Brass Band. Today, I want to take this opportunity to show you what these videos will be like in the future.
I'm not going to do a lot of playing today, partly because I have trouble playing and talking at the same time. It's a weird thing. I can play and sing all day long, but switching back and forth between playing and talking doesn't work for me. It's dumb. So, I'm holding a sousaphone so that you will know that it is, in fact, me. I can hold up my ID and today's newspaper if you would like, but I'm not going to do that.
Without further ado, we're going to talk about the brass band sousaphone roll and how it's different from what you do with any other kind of roll. It's important to note that it differs from your classical tuba gig in almost every way; it bears very little resemblance.
We're going to use a simple "more important than, less important than" structure for today, okay?
Rhythm is more important than notes.
And that's the absolute key in brass band. Think about it this way:
However, if you start thinking about the notes as being more important than the rhythms, you'll throw off your whole band. The worst thing you can do is detract from the groove rather than adding to it.
As a brass band sousaphonist, you need to think about this like a drummer. Everything needs to be in some sort of meter from now on. This includes:
You need to have that metronome on or some sort of a drum track that you can play along to until you have this sense of internal pulse where your body just feels the rhythm. Then you can just groove on your own recognizance.
For example:
Scales should be in time:
Boom, boom, boom ...
All of your lip slurs need to be in time as well. Treat them as if they are the bassline of a song, where everything needs to be precise.
Style is more important than tone.
This may seem strange for classical tuba players who want their tone to be absolutely round, chocolatey, and beautiful. However, uniformity is not what brass band music is about; it's about snaps and pops!
Think about it in terms of microdynamics:
You can't come out of the texture if you're afraid of changing your tone quality; otherwise, you'll blend into the bass drum and won't distinguish yourself.
Remember: The musicians you admire are the ones who play with style. It's not always about playing perfectly; it's about figuring out what makes you unique.
Volume is more important than hot licks.
Now, I know this may make me sound like a hypocrite because I love hot licks as much as anyone. However, with 20 years of brass band experience, I'll tell you that what the audience and the band respond to from your chair is the volume.
As a sousaphonist in the back, you should be:
So there you have it: Nat's three rule number ones.
I hope you enjoyed this. Again, I'm Nat McIntosh, and this has been a Nat McIntosh production of Nat McIntosh's Hot Licks with Nat Macintosh.
Thank you very much!

Youngblood Brass Band fusiona los metales sin concesiones de Nueva Orleans con la energía y el lirismo del hip-hop. Procedente de Madison, Brooklyn, Minneapolis y Chicago, este grupo de diez integrantes ha girado por todo el mundo desde 2000 y ha colaborado con figuras como Questlove y Talib Kweli. Se sienten igual de cómodos liderando una banda de marcha con sus propias composiciones que encabezando un festival de punk. En MusicGurus desglosan su sonido que mezcla Nueva Orleans y hip-hop: cómo componen y arreglan para los metales, el vocabulario rítmico y armónico que lo mantiene todo unido, y cómo tocar una línea de viento como parte de una sección compacta, incluidas las partes completas de su tema 'Brooklyn'. read more