Well, the first thing would probably be to take it to a repairman so he can see if there isn’t something wrong with your instrument- I mean, it could be an air leak?
Otherwise, if your horn is fine, your embouchure could be too tight- it often happens when you have too tight an embouchure, you become sharp. This often means that you have to release some pressure on the reed.
Try a new reed if all else fails, and see if that doesn’t help.
Is it JUST the G that does that? And G in which register?
One Response
LadyFenyx
January 30th, 2010 at 5:27 pm
1Well, the first thing would probably be to take it to a repairman so he can see if there isn’t something wrong with your instrument- I mean, it could be an air leak?
Otherwise, if your horn is fine, your embouchure could be too tight- it often happens when you have too tight an embouchure, you become sharp. This often means that you have to release some pressure on the reed.
Try a new reed if all else fails, and see if that doesn’t help.
Is it JUST the G that does that? And G in which register?
Good luck!
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