5

I have a couple of months working on my improvisation and I'm having some issues with fast passages on the saxophone's higher notes and overtones (starting from D with the left hand palm).

I'm currently trying to work it out with an exercise consisting of chromatic ascending and descending mayor seconds. (D-E-D#-E# and so on).

Are there any other good exercises for this fingering out there that you would recommend? Do you recommend any other approach?

2
  • Just so I'm clear on your question, are you having issues with the left-hand palm key notes (which would start at D above the treble staff, written pitch) or are you having issues with the octave above that? The way your question is written suggests either, and the answers would be quite different.
    – Andrew
    Sep 23, 2011 at 4:21
  • @Andrew yes, I'm having issues with the left hand palm notes and above. I just added the clarification, thanks! Sep 23, 2011 at 11:23

1 Answer 1

6

It sounds like you have a good start at addressing the issue, actually. There is really no shortcut to dealing with the palm key notes.

If you were practicing a tricky passage in a written-out piece, I would suggest starting very slowly and working your way up to tempo. I would also suggest working on evenness by practicing in "rhythms." What I mean by that is, say you are practicing this passage:

Palm key exercise in eighth notes

Being careful to be especially strict with the rhythm, you would practice in both of these ways:

Dotted eighth, then sixteenth rhythm Sixteenth, then dotted eighth rhythm

If you don't trust your time to be exactly precise, use a metronome. Also, no swinging here. The rhythms need to be strict.

Once you are somewhat comfortable with those rhythms, try these:

Dotted eighth, sixteenth, sixteenth, dotted eighth Sixteenth, dotted eighth, dotted eighth, sixteenth

Again, the rhythms need to be strict. The purpose of these rhythms is to encourage evenness by practicing the transitions between notes in real time, but not all at once. That is difficult to understand until you have done the exercises for a while.

The rhythm exercise is good for evenness everywhere, not just in the palm keys. As for the palm keys themselves, try to avoid extraneous motions.

Finally, since you say you are working on improvisation rather than written-out passages, try writing your own exercises. I took the one you started with, but you will want to come up with other passages to try. Do not neglect the high F♯ either, provided that you have the key. (It is, of course, possible to play F♯ without a high F♯ key, but that is a separate topic having nothing to do with palm keys.)

1
  • 1
    This is what my teacher advocates every time a more complicated passage comes along. She normally says that every rhythm change should be practised at least 3 times without mistake before increasing the speed up a notch... Very effective technique as far as I can tell. One thing to add, always keep the connected notes the same way as the original despite the rhythm changes.
    – Fabricio
    May 14, 2014 at 10:22

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.