I was told by a trumpet player to stick with learning to play the sax since the trumpet is mucn more difficult to learn , true ??
Brass instruments are harder than woodwinds in some ways. We have the benefit of a reed to get our air column started, whereas with brass instruments, your lips are performing the function of the reed. The practical effect of this is more wear and tear on the lips and facial muscles than what we experience as saxophonists. Brass players have to be very careful about warming up, taking breaks, etc. or they can end up losing range or even being unable to play the instrument. Also, it takes longer to develop range and acceptable tone than it does on saxophone, in my experience.
Having said that, to truly master any instrument takes a similar amount of dedication. My advice would be to play the instrument you most want to play. If you really want to play both, others (including folks on this forum) have shown that it's possible, but you'd need to find the time to practice both instruments regularly to achieve a decent standard of play.
Definitely agree with this. You can (generally) let a sax embouchure go for a while (weeks, not months or years) without practice and still come back with a reasonable sound but if you do the same with trumpet, you'll have significant difficulties until you rebuild embouchure strength and accuracy.In general terms, (in my opinion only), a trumpet embouchure requires more practice than a sax embouchure to maintain an acceptable standard of musicianship.
:|...Getting back to the op.
Well-put. This is kind of how I feel (maybe minus the last sentenceTrumpet is easier, no contest. Imagine you know absolutely nothing about musical instruments and are presented with a trumpet and sax. It would take a few seconds to assemble the trumpet. After a few moments blowing, you'd probably figure out you need to buzz to make a sound. You could easily work out the fingerings by trial and error. You'd probably stumble on partials pretty quickly as well. The mechanical simplicity alone makes trumpet easier.
Sax, on the other hand, would be a challenge to assemble correctly. Embouchure and fingerings are both far more complex than a brass instrument to figure out by trial and error.
Case in point, when my son was young, I, a sax player, taught myself and him how to play trombone in just a few days.
As others have said, it would take about equal effort to master any instrument, except really complex ones like piano.
What this thread is really about is that a trumpet player insulted you, but you took his insult literally. Next time, just hand him your sax and see how he sounds.
Sure, neck to body, mouthpiece to neck is easy. But how many ebay listings have you seen with the neck backwards or the mouthpiece upside down? With no instruction, could you place the reed on the mouthpiece correctly and make the correct embouchure? Would you know to align the octave mechanism correctly?The ease of assembly point does not seem like a real issue to me. A sax has one extra piece (the neck) compared to a trumpet.
:wave: me, me, me !I'd be interested to know how many of the people weighing in on this (and on the numerous other threads this has been discussed on) have ever played the trumpet.
Herb HardestyThere may have been others with this unusual double, but I do not know who.