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Started by Turkeyman, April 25, 2021, 03:35:08 PM
Quote from: Turkeyman on April 25, 2021, 03:35:08 PMWhen I hear Mark Prudhomme there's no way I can sound that raspy. What say you?
Quote from: warrent423 on April 25, 2021, 06:15:48 PMQuote from: ChesterCopperpot on April 25, 2021, 05:46:59 PMBoth. A lot of it is lip vibration. Some folks do it by adding moisture. Call me crazy but I think part of Farmer's secret is the hard candy he always keeps in his mouth when he's playing. But a maker can open up the bell and/or make other changes to the internals and increase rasp. I've had long conversations with quite a few makers about that. [mention]gergg [/mention]makes an incredible trumpet and he's been fiddling with internals to add rasp over the last year. Just ask him. Ask Anthony Ellis. Hell, ask Mark Prudhomme why he started turning trumpets and how he was able to achieve the sound he wanted. Sent from my iPhone using TapatalkLet's hear some rasp on the Gregg or Ellis yelpers. I've yet to hear even those two builders come even remotely close to matching Mark or Zack's sound.
Quote from: ChesterCopperpot on April 25, 2021, 05:46:59 PMBoth. A lot of it is lip vibration. Some folks do it by adding moisture. Call me crazy but I think part of Farmer's secret is the hard candy he always keeps in his mouth when he's playing. But a maker can open up the bell and/or make other changes to the internals and increase rasp. I've had long conversations with quite a few makers about that. [mention]gergg [/mention]makes an incredible trumpet and he's been fiddling with internals to add rasp over the last year. Just ask him. Ask Anthony Ellis. Hell, ask Mark Prudhomme why he started turning trumpets and how he was able to achieve the sound he wanted. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: howl on April 25, 2021, 06:59:12 PMInternals only affect how you can draw air. All the sound is the player. Rasp doesn't come from the call. That's physically impossible. It comes from how your lips interact with each other and the mouth piece. There are things you can do with one call you can't with another, and different calls project your sound back out differently, but it comes down to what you're doing. It's not the call itself.As you learn to play, you'll learn how to make a call both clear and raspy by varying how you play it. It's not something you can buy. You have to practice and try. I'm getting close on purring on a trumpet. A few years ago I had no clue how to even begin.
Quote from: Chris O on April 25, 2021, 08:05:40 PM...that is how Lewis plays his calls so he probably builds them for that.
Quote from: ChesterCopperpot on April 25, 2021, 08:34:17 PMI'd venture to say everyone on this thread and in this forum would agree that Mark Prudhomme is more proficient on a yelper than they are (I most certainly would). So if it's all in the caller not in the call why has he said very specifically that he started making his own trumpets because he couldn't achieve the sound he wanted out of the ones he was using? If what the people in this thread arguing "it's all in the caller" were true, Prudhomme could have achieved the sound he was looking for with a Penn's Woods.The build of the yelper doesn't make it raspy it's the user playing that style. The call design only lends ease of playing it raspy. All calls can be played raspy. But building a call to be played specifically in that "farmer" style can take away from from the overall playability of that call. To answer your question on why mark designed his the way he did is for ease of playing that style not to make a trumpet sound raspy just by playing it as it can be played with no rasp. Your comment about playing a penns woods and not needing to build one is generalizing to support your opinion. To play the farmer style a more open trumpet tends to work better the exact opposite of a farmer. I don't know if you've ever played an actual Zach Farmer call or a Prudhomme or a penns woods but I have and a more open call playing that raspy style is easier but with the caviat that building a call for that style will limit versatility to some extent. It's a give and take situation. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Quote from: mmclain on April 26, 2021, 12:51:50 AMQuote from: ChesterCopperpot on April 25, 2021, 08:34:17 PMI'd venture to say everyone on this thread and in this forum would agree that Mark Prudhomme is more proficient on a yelper than they are (I most certainly would). So if it's all in the caller not in the call why has he said very specifically that he started making his own trumpets because he couldn't achieve the sound he wanted out of the ones he was using? If what the people in this thread arguing "it's all in the caller" were true, Prudhomme could have achieved the sound he was looking for with a Penn's Woods.The build of the yelper doesn't make it raspy it's the user playing that style. The call design only lends ease of playing it raspy. All calls can be played raspy. But building a call to be played specifically in that "farmer" style can take away from from the overall playability of that call. To answer your question on why mark designed his the way he did is for ease of playing that style not to make a trumpet sound raspy just by playing it as it can be played with no rasp. Your comment about playing a penns woods and not needing to build one is generalizing to support your opinion. To play the farmer style a more open trumpet tends to work better the exact opposite of a farmer. I don't know if you've ever played an actual Zach Farmer call or a Prudhomme or a penns woods but I have and a more open call playing that raspy style is easier but with the caviat that building a call for that style will limit versatility to some extent. It's a give and take situation. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk