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Polymnia
Press
Karl
Degenhart - Mörikestr.
3 - 87719
Mindelheim - Germany
Telefon/Phone: 0049/(0)8261/7399915 -
Email:
polymniapress@gmx.de
www.polymnia-press.de
Also
Sprach Arnold Jacobs
A Developmental Guide
for Brass Wind Musicians
Compiled by
Bruce Nelson

In addition to being an
outstanding musician, Arnold Jacobs undoubtedly
was the most influential brass teacher of the
second half of the twentieth century. Countless
brass (and other) musicians from all over the
world traveled to Chicago to study with this
master. Additionally, Mr. Jacobs also gave master
classes that were popular with students, teachers
and professionals in many different locations.
Even if it were all known, it would be impossible
to reduce to writing all of the advice Arnold
Jacobs gave to thousands of students over a period
of almost 70 years. Nevertheless, this book is an
attempt to preserve in writing, by topic, the
common ideas and variations of those ideas from
which so many musicians have benefited. Bruce
Nelson´s book comes in six chapters. Each chapter
deals with one central aspect of brass
playing:
Chapter I: Concepts
Fundamental to Development
Chapter II: Mental Controls
Chapter III:
The Vibrating Embouchure
Chapter IV:
Breathing
Chapter V:
Articulating
Chapter VI:
Practicing and Performing
Appendix A - "Special Studies" by Arnold
Jacobs
(reprinted from Hal Leonard Method, 1963)
Appendix B - Use of Breathing Devices"
(reprinted from Arnold Jacobs: Song and Wind)
$22.95
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Here's
what they are saying - reviews of Also
Sprach Arnold Jacobs
From ITEA
JOURNAL:
Also Sprach
Arnold Jacobs: A Developmental Guide for Brass
Wind Musicians
compiled by Bruce Nelson. Polymnia Press.
2006. 104 pp. Available from Wind Song Press
Limited P.O. Box 146, Gurnee, IL 60031-0146.
Phone: 847 223-4586, fax 847 223-4580.
www.windsongpress.com $22.95.
When M. Dee
Stewart’s book Arnold Jacobs: The Legacy of a
Master came out twenty years ago, there was
much excitement over the publication of a book
concerning the greatest brass teacher this
country has ever seen. The excitement was
somewhat tempered when we realized that,
valuable though the book is, it was primarily
reminiscences of Mr. Jacobs rather than an
explication of his methods and his teaching.
Brian Frederiksen’s Song and Wind took a
big step in that direction, but now with Bruce
Nelson’s book, we finally have, mostly in Mr.
Jacob’s own words, a printed version of Mr.
Jacobs’ teaching.
This is not a
book to read curled up in front of the
fireplace. It is not narrative in style. Mr.
Nelson, formerly the bass trombonist in the
Lyric Opera of Chicago and the Grant Park
Symphony, has scoured tapes of Mr. Jacobs’
master classes and his own lessons with Mr.
Jacobs to lay out the master’s philosophy and
application of teaching brass playing in his own
words. Finishing a paragraph, you find yourself
thinking about earlier statements, and trying to
synthesize them in your mind. At times, it’s
like some of those “business stores” in the
mall, selling framed versions of platitudes like
“Whether you think you can, or think you can’t –
you’re right”. These are more than platitudes,
though, and some are in boldface, such as my
favorite: Breathe to expand: don’t expand
to breathe. I was lucky enough in the
1970s and 80s to spend ten years studying with
Mr. Jacobs, and with every sentence in this
book, I actually could actually hear his voice
intoning these words.
There are six
chapters, with headings of “Concepts Fundamental
to Development”, “Mental Controls”, “The
Vibrating Embouchure”, “Breathing”,
“Articulating” and “Practicing and Performing”.
There is, of course, overlap in materials, but
that is hardly a problem. A salient feature of
Mr. Jacobs’ teaching was to repeat concepts in
slightly different ways, knowing that surely
one of those ways would get through even the
thickest of skulls (yours truly). There are
also two appendices, one a reprint of part of
Mr. Frederiksen’s Song and Wind dealing
with the use of breathing devices, and the other
a reprint of the exercises that Mr. Jacobs wrote
for publication in the Hal Leonard Advanced
Band Method for Tuba. This is one of the
very few items that Mr. Jacobs published, and
its inclusion here, although the method book is
still available, adds to the value of this
volume.
All in all, Mr.
Nelson is to be thanked for his achievement.
Mr. Jacobs’ thoughts are finally accessible in
printed reference form, and whether you are a
teacher or a student, you must own this book.
It is one that you will rely on for years to
come.
Michael Short
Senior Teaching Artist of Low Brass
Drake University
Des Moines, IA
FROM INTERNATIONAL
TROMBONE ASSOCIATION JOURNAL:
Also Sprach Arnold
Jacobs: A Developmental Guide for Brass Wind
Musicians.
Mindelheim, Germany: Polymnia Press, 2006.
104 pages with index. Paperbound.
www.polymnia-press.de
Those of us who learned to
play brass instruments in the latter half of the
20th century are familiar with the
ground breaking pedagogy of Arnold Jacobs
(1915-1988), tubist of the Chicago Symphony
(1944-1988). His thorough study of human
physiology and psychology combined with great
musicianship and the objective pursuit of the
actual processes at work in brass playing set
the gold standard for brass pedagogy. But since
his death new generations of brass players enjoy
less connection to his influence because Mr.
Jacobs did not believe in putting his teachings
in print, instead preferring to pass them on
through direct lessons, master classes and
clinics. To be sure, his influence is passed on
through his student's teaching. But also,
through publications like this, Mr. Jacob's
students share his direct teachings and
philosophies in festschrift-like tributes
to his legacy.
Bruce Nelson, retired bass
trombonist of the Lyric Opera of Chicago,
studied over many years with Mr. Jacobs. He
assembled this book at the suggestion of
trombonist Gerhard Wolf as a "comprehensive,
organized and authentic version of Arnold
Jacob's teachings." Mr. Nelson takes direct
quotes from master classes, private lessons and
conversations and arranges them by topic:
Concepts Fundamental to Development, Mental
Controls, The Vibrating Embouchure, Breathing,
Articulating, Practicing and Performing. Several
of Mr. Jacob's famous aphorisms serve as the
basis for further subdivision of these topics
(chapters): "By studying sound, you are studying
breath." "The tongue makes no sound." "Order air
as external wind, not as internal pressure."
Consequently, Also Sprach
is not fast food. This is the richest cuisine on
the menu, the sort of material best taken in
small quantities and that takes time to digest.
There is so much to consider in each paragraph.
Most emerging brass players, who have oblique
experience with Mr. Jacobs' concepts, will find
a text that fills in the blanks, completes
partial understanding, integrates concepts
together, and draws verifiable conclusions about
best practices. Bruce Nelson's decisions about
how to organize this material are both helpful
and important. It is easy to get lost in all the
profundity here; what a refreshing problem to
encounter in modern literature. By categorizing
the quotes, something he is uniquely qualified
to do, he creates context and helps us
understand what Mr. Jacobs really means. As
should be expected in a collection of quotes
spanning a lifetime there is much redundancy.
But far from a pejorative feature this
redundancy serves to pursue concepts to
completion, to present core philosophies in
different ways. Here are several statements
taken from different chapters that, in their own
contexts, exemplify the core philosophy of
'music over method:'
"Develop good habits; don't
try to correct bad habits."
"Embouchure is resultant, not causative."
"Focus on the psychology, not the mechanics of
breathing."
"Base the concept of vibrato on product, not
methodology."
"Move artistic goals to the foreground."
It took Bruce Nelson three
years to compile and organize this extraordinary
collection of wisdom, but it took him a lifetime
of study and endeavor with one of the world's
greatest professors of the art to come to a
place where this book could be written. We often
grace valued publications with statements like
'should be in every brass player's library' or
'a must read.' Also Sprach may define
this category. It is a preeminent document on
several fronts. The pedagogy is unsurpassed, the
organization communicates this, and it is
comprehensive even including the few pages of
'Special Studies' Mr. Jacobs did publish in
1963. We owe a great debt of gratitude to Bruce
Nelson and Polymnia Press for preserving to us
the teaching of one of the finest brass
pedagogues of all time.
-Mike Hall
Old Dominion
University
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