Hey guys it's me again! Things are going well but my lower lip is so sore from biting it that I can hardly play. I can feel the place on my lip where my teeth are doing it harm. Any suggestions or do I just need a sax callous? 
Are you saying that you don't bite when playing alto :shock: You must be one hell of a player. But for the rest of us, the cigarette paper seems to work quite well. Everybody I know bites, including my sax teacher, so I think that while not biting may work for you, for many other people biting is part of the correct embouchure. And I'm not stopping this 'bad habit'. It works for me, I get a great tone and never get tired. Again, if it works for you to not bite, then so be it, but I think the generally accepted embouchure for alto includes biting.saxismyaxe said:Unfortunately, I don't think that we are addressing the real problem here, and that is that you shouldn't be biting AT ALL with a proper saxophone embouchure. The muscles around the mouth should be doing all the work/support, and the lower jaw should be slack enough so that the lower teeth aren't biting into the lower lip under any circumstances.
Get the Larry Teal book THE ART OF SAXOPHONE PLAYING for a complete explanation on how one forms and develops the proper embouchure.
It is of utmost importance that you cease this bad habit immediately, as it is detrimental to both your playing, and the health of your lips and the nerves in them.
http://www.soundclick.com/bands/3/grey55_music.htmGrey,
I HIGHLY recommend that you get the afore mentioned book as well. I don't know who your instructor is, but I would advise you to consider finding another ASAP. With a degree in Music from UNT, and over 20 years experience as a studio/stage player and instructor I can tell you that biting is NEVER acceptable in a proper embouchure with any size saxophone. This is one of the most basic lessons a player must learn. Why you are being allowed to develop this nasty habit under an instructor's assistance is beyond me, unless he is primarily a clarinetist, where this approach is rather more commonly found, but improper none the less.
By the way, I own and play members of the entire saxophone family with equal facility. Your embouchure shouldn't and doesn't change RADICALLY from horn to horn, and certainly one does not bite while playing any of them if done properly.
I'm 38 Years Old!
Alright, thanks. Not to sound like I'm trying to change sides in the argument, but I'm actually not sure if I bite anymore on alto. I don't use the folded up cigarette paper anymore, and I can play for hours without anything hurting, but there's always an indentation where my teeth have been after playing. Is this really biting?Grey,
I hate to beat a dead horse, but you are shooting yourself in the foot by biting. You admit that you are using an orthodox embouchure on Tenor, so we both know it can be done. If you take a look at Larry Teal's book, he gives the necessary exercises to build up all the muscles around the oral cavity. A few month of practicing this routine will eliminate your dependence on biting, and you will find your tone, control, dynamics etc. improving well beyond what you think you have now.
If you plan on playing into adulthood, let alone making a career or serious hobby out of this, you will need to get over this hurdle as soon as possible. Best of luck and cheers.
When the lower lip muscles are strong enough to do their job in a proper embouchure, they will feel somewhat like they do when you make an exaggerated pouting gesture with the lower lip extended. This in effect lifts the lip off of the lower teeth through much of your playing time, and the cushion of the lower lip only brushes lightly against the teeth. I am not suggesting that one actually sticks the lower lip out to this degree, however the muscle group used for both lip forms is the same, and thus the feeling.If any saxophonist can play and not make a tooth indentation in their lower lip id like really love to see it.
Yeah, Dr. Cohen really is an amazing character. :razz:Razzy said:College professors who bite while playing alto... this simply amazes me.
http://www.joeallard.org/interviews/cohen.htmlPC:[Some talking I've just done about jaw vibrato] goes in concordance with Joe's teaching of embouchure. This so much changed my whole understanding of how to play saxophone, that it's a core part of my teaching today, and it comes directly from my work with Joe. He believed that all the control of the sound and the control of the reed comes from the chewing muscles of the jaw. The jaw controls the reed; the lip is only a cushion or buffer over the teeth to allow the reed to vibrate in a more musical way. This was one of the two major embouchure concepts that were prevalent in the 1930s, `40s and `50s. The other one, the older style, used the lip tissue as being that which applied the pressure against the reed, and not the jaw. You would have a lot of lip; it would almost be like a subtone kind of embouchure. You would squeeze against what would be a closed lay mouthpiece with a thin reed, and you would get a very warm, fuzzy, beautiful kind of sound kind of like Ben Webster, a sound that would have a wonderful warmth to it. The problem with that embouchure was that if you were going into the upper register of the horn, you just couldn't push the reed up with the lip tissue enough to get the pitch up there. It did not allow for any efficient altissimo register and it just didn't have quite the clarity and the intensity that a lot of modern playing was asking for. So there were a lot of drawbacks to that older style of embouchure. Merle Johnston, who was also a well-known teacher in New York was an advocate of that - Larry Teal studied with Merle Johnston and that's where Larry Teal gets a lot of his embouchure thoughts about the round wheel and about how the lip muscles are supporting. Joe is from the other school, where you have a rather flat and thin cushion and all the work is done with the jaw and teeth. You have a whole other kind of playing which was then what was being demanded in studio and all other kinds of saxophone playing. And that's the kind that most people use today.
DM: But at the time the other embouchure was more prevalent.
PC: In the '30s and '40s that's the way people were playing. But I don't believe Marcel Mule was playing that way. And I don't think Sigurd Rascher was playing that way. You can't, if you're going to play as high as he did, and you can't if you're going to articulate as well as Mule did. ...
http://www.joeallard.org/interviews/radnofsky.htmlJoe taught us how to chew. He'd say, "That's how you play - if you can chew food you can play the saxophone." So he taught us to do that; how to keep our lip over the teeth and still use the chewing muscles. He'd say to us, "Every note requires a minimal amount of jaw pressure," but we had to figure out how much. You didn't want to use more than was necessary. Joe didn't want it to hurt when you played.
haha I experienced that the second day! SoftLips chapstick works wonders!RickBusarow said:SexySaxy, don't worry. Once your embouchure strengthens up enough for you to play for long periods of time, that "biting" lip pain will be replaced by the wonderful chapped lip pain.![]()
RickBusarow said:I just think that some veteran players on this board are a bit too ready to say that if a younger player's embouchure hurts, something must be wrong. If you play 18 holes the first time you go golfing, chances are your hands are going to hurt afterward - but that doesn't mean anything wrong with your grip (or your gear). If you walk it your feet are probably going to hurt too - but that doesn't mean something's wrong with your walking technique. You're just not used to doing it. I think there are elements of our playing that some take for granted. Some of the things we don't give any thought to are some of the most daunting aspects of what we do, and I think that tiny lip callous is definitely one of those things.