In addition to my private teaching practice,
I am a partner in Dr Downing Music.
At the age of 18, I taught myself to play
the clarinet. Like so many others before me and since, I struggled
to achieve a good technique despite the contradictory advice offered
in the existing primers and tutor books. If there is a fault to
be played on the clarinet, I have suffered them all.
At the age of 40, I took up the flute, with
the intention of becoming a teacher. I studied first with Joan
Miller and then with Jane Pickles, Principal Flute in the BBC Concert
Orchestra. I have also attended residential courses with Susan
Milan and Sebastian Bell and
studied the clarinet with Pamela Weston.
In the past 53 years of playing and 30+
years of teaching, I have developed my own ideas of how the clarinet,
flute and saxophone could be taught - with the finest teachers possible
- my pupils. This research and experimentation has resulted in
a method of teaching which is highly effective, particularly with
beginners - even old ones like me.
I am firmly convinced, from bitter personal
experience, that the standard method of teaching the clarinet, advocated
in primers and tutor books, is seriously flawed. Yet, correctly
taught, the clarinet is incredibly easy to play.
My major criticisms of the standard tutor
book methods are:
a) An embouchure is normally
not taught. Pupils are given a soft reed and the standard advice
to "turn your lip back and blow". There is usually little
or no further explanation. As a result, pupils often spend more
than a year struggling in the bottom register with a dreadful tone.
b) Not only is the fingering taught
to beginners oversimplified, the concept of a "break"
is also taught, creating a mental hang-up. Every other woodwind
instrument has a "break" but it is never taught to be a problem.
Worse, having learned this "baby talk" way, students are then
shown the correct, better method. This "learning and unlearning"
process is contrary to all good teaching practice. Is it
any surprise that most give up playing the clarinet?
There is also absolutely no good reason why clarinet students should
be taught initially exclusively in the bottom register of the instrument.
My students ALL start playing the clarion register with a correct embouchure
and only move lower as their embouchure develops - which is many times
quicker than conventional teaching.
When I met Sandra
Downing, who had likewise suffered from poor bassoon teaching, we
decided to try to do something to help other sufferers, thus the Dr
Downing Doctor Books were born.
The Clarinettist's
Technique Doctors, also show you how to develop excellent tone and
finger technique from the start - without biting or blowing. In
this method, the "break" doesn't exist. Using my methods,
students normally achieve passes at Associated Board Grade 5 in 18 months,
those of higher ability in a year.
With the onset of osteoarthritis in his late 60's affecting my
fingers and restricting my ability to play the clarinet, I decided to
take up the Bass Trombone at the tender age of 69. Adrian "Benny"
Morris, Professor of Bass Trombone at the RNCM in Manchester and Principal
Bass Trombone with the Hallé Orchestra agreed to teach me. The
result of this venture is a whole new series of books and charts for
Trombonists.
Age is no barrier to learning! You are never too old to learn to
play music - as I prove daily.
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