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 How do I smear?
Author: xtreblexclefx 
Date:   2005-03-25 17:08

I play in a high school stage band that is going to a competition in April. I have the honor of playing the clarinet solo part for Artie Shaw's "Begin the Beguine". At the end of song there is this amazing 4 beat smear from middle Bb to the one an octave up. I've looked everywhere and asked everyone but no one seems to know how to produce a good, clean sound for this. Please help me!

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 Re: How do I smear?
Author: bob49t 
Date:   2005-03-25 17:38

Loose chromatic up to C or D, then follow advice for "glissando" to be found on a BB search. Smear or Gliss is not an easy thing to pull off immediately. It's a "feel" thing described better by other contributors. Relatively uncontrollable to begin with and certainly a long gliss such as this (and Rhapsody in Blue) is difficult to time exactly. Stick in though, as it seems easy once you've mastered it, no matter how difficult it is to describe !

RT

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 Re: How do I smear?
Author: xtreblexclefx 
Date:   2005-03-25 18:38

Thank you for your help, I'll have to try that.

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 Re: How do I smear?
Author: music_is_life 
Date:   2005-03-25 20:21

I'm not sure if I do it correctly...some people can manage to do it with their embrochure...but what I do it start on whatever note it starts on (like, say a 4th line D) and kind of slide your fingers, one by one off the holes, quickly, but in order and not TOO fast. this will cause the notes to progressively get higher as you take your fingers away, but since you are sliding them off and still blowing, it "smears". You have to work at it because when I first started doing it, it would squeak and it took awhile to make it clean, but my smears sound correct.
I hear rumor that thinking low and positioning your jaw correctly can make something like a top space G sound like a B, and you smear up with the use of your mouth, not fingers. I have not been able to master that and find that what I do with my fingers suffices. I am sure someone will refute me or give you a better way to do it. hope this helps. :)

-Lindsie



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 Re: How do I smear?
Author: xtreblexclefx 
Date:   2005-03-25 20:32

It sounds like good advice to me. I'll try that, too. Thanks.

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 Re: How do I smear?
Author: sfalexi 
Date:   2005-03-25 21:35

And keep a good strong airflow. Otherwise when you slide the fingers off it'll sound wimpy.

US Army Japan Band

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 Re: How do I smear?
Author: smross 
Date:   2005-03-26 02:23

I think dropping the back of your tongue as low as you can helps accomplish the smear easier. At least that's my experience (which isn't much)...

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 Re: How do I smear?
Author: Robert Moody 
Date:   2005-03-26 04:45

A "smear" is really a matter of voicing. In the upper clarion and altissimo registers, it can be done completely without the use of the fingers. If you want to begin in the lower clarion somewhere around fourth line D, then you will need the fingers to help you start (for most people).

A quick note about sliding fingers: The smears you hear of jazzers or a good smooth Rhapsody in Blue smear are not accomplished with the sliding of the fingers off the keys. At the most, the fingers guide the sound to orient it around certain pitches, but the smear itself is solely in the voicing in your mouth.

I was also told by my teacher that it is really difficult to explain, but once you accomplish it, it becomes very easy...very quickly. He said you just kinda have to figure it out. I agree and disagree all at the same time.

You are going to really need to become familiar with how things "feel" inside your mouth when you are playing. I'm not necessarily talking about your teeth, your tongue, your palate. I'm talking about where the "pressure" is in your mouth when you are blowing. To give an idea of how to determine this...or rather...discover this, I would offer this exercise:

Play a strong low E with your eyes closed. Think about where you feel the pocket of air or pressure in your mouth when you are playing. Imagine a ball of air swirling around in a small area inside your mouth before it goes into the clarinet. That pocket of swirling air would feel like pressure in whatever portion of the mouth it was in.

Now play the low E again and, still with your eyes closed and thinking about how it feels in your mouth, consciously try to move your tongue to the position of saying "Eeee". Did you feel a change in the perceived pocket of air? Where it was and where it moved around to when you changed to saying "Eeee" when you played?

Now try playing the low E, eyes closed, and set the inside of your mouth as if you were saying "Oooooh". Did the pressure change in your mouth or did the pocket of pressure move?

In order to smear you are going to mess around with that pressure and pocket of air. Keep trying that exercise on different notes until you are fully aware of the pressure or pocket of air and where it is located when you are playing. We are going to shift it nearly to the back and starting down your throat. [cool] Remember...all we've done is try to make you aware of something. That is not the smear.

After you have played around with the idea above and have become aware of the pocket of air, I would ask you to play a throat G. Play with a nice sound and think about the pocket of air. Now I would like you to "squeak" the G. You can adjust your embouchure if you need to, but bring it back once the G is squeaked. Keep trying and eventually you should get the G squeaking to be totally under your control and with a decent sound. That "squeaked G" is really an altissimo D above the staff. This could take a little while to master. However long it takes, make sure you are taking time to do some of it with your eyes closed and noticing the voicing (pocket of air) in your mouth as you switch between G and squeaked-G.

After you have become rather comfortable with the squeaking and feel you have good control of it, play the squeaked G and attempt to move your voicing as you did in the low E exercise above. So you will squeak the G to the alternate D and then, while sustaining a good sound and with your eyes closed, move your voicing from "Eeeee" to "Ooooh". You can try other vowels if you have the interest.

You may or may not end up bending the pitch in that process. IF you do, GO FOR IT! Bend it all over the place and see how far you can bend it down. It is not likely that you immediately went to bending the pitch, but the important part is learning the difference in your voicing to play G and then squeak it and learning the difference in your voicing in the low E exercise.

Lastly, with the voicing feeling in your head and mouth, play G on the top of the staff. Slowly slide your fingers off from the ring finger up and directly to the side. The ring finger should lead and as it passes the halfway open point of its hole, the middle finger should be beginning to open its hole. The key here is, again, to close your eyes and feel the resistance in your mouth and the air as you, playing with good support, begin to transition off of the good G and to the inbetween space leading up to A. It is somewhere in that space and weird resistance between the two notes that you will again attempt to change between "Eeeee" and "Oooo". If you feel the pocket of air beginning to move back to the throat and the sound begins to dip in pitch, you are certainly on par to learn to smear.

Remember, a real smear is done in the voicing and aided by the fingers. The fingers may help start a smear but are not responsible for it. You must become aware of the voicing in your mouth and throat in order to do a real smear.

[Edit and extra note: I just wanted to add an observation of poor semantics in some of the response before this thread concerning clarinet glissandi. Despite people's inclination to say it is part of the embouchure, that is not a good description. Most people equate the word "embouchure" with only the muscles of the lips, chin and cheeks. In that case, the gliss is NOT a matter of embouchure. The lips, chin and cheeks remain poised in a good embouchure position during a smear. Voicing deals with the inside of the mouth when playing and it is not effective to call voicing part of the embouchure...because it simply isn't.]

Hope that helps or give you some ideas.

Take Care,

Robert Moody
http://www.musix4me.com
Free Clarinet Lessons and Digital Library!

Post Edited (2005-03-26 17:23)

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 Re: How do I smear?
Author: Vicky 
Date:   2005-03-26 07:55


Robert,
Good explination!

I had to "master" the smear last semester when our wind symphony played Godzilla Eats Las Vegas. The good thing was that I already knew how to do it. I started experimenting with it my senior year in high school when my band played Blue Shades. The solo in that requires the soloist to bend some pitches. I first started by using the mouthpiece and the barrel. I would sirens on it (bending the pitch by voicing). I became comfortable with that, and I started to bend on the clarinet. Little by little I would smear (by sliding my fingers off of the clarinet and voicing at the same time) a group of notes. I started on the middle D and went up to G. When I mastered that, I started smearing from D to high C. I would try to see how far I could bend the high C. Most of the time, I could smear down to a G. Then, as I got more experienced, I let the voicing do most of it.

Today I am smearing the last gliss in the Copland Clarinet Concerto…I love that one!

Good luck with it! Keep us posted.

Vicky

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 Re: How do I smear?
Author: Joel Clifton 
Date:   2005-03-27 15:50

First it's a good idea to practice smearing the higher register. Start on a high C. By mouthing the sound "eeeuuuwww", try bending the C down to an A. Then try bending other notes. Practice until you have good control over the pitch. For example, you can finger a high D, and try bending the note to play part of a scale. For example, you could bend to C, B, A, and then back up to D.

When you're comfortable with how it feels, finger a C above the third line. Then slowly roll your fingers off the holes until there is a tiny crack of space under the third fingers of both hands. The sound, of course, will crack and sqeak. With those two holes (or a resonable facsimile thereof, you can experiment with it) very slightly uncovered, make the "euuu" movement with your mouth again, and try to bend the cracking note down close to the original C. You can experiment with moving your fingers around to get the best response. When you get the C, do not expect it to sound great.

Once you have memorized how it feels in your mouth to hold the note down there while it's trying to crack, try playing a normal C, cracking those holes open, and keeping the pitch down with no disturbance in the sound. It should take a somewhat drastic change in embochure to keep the C going while cracking the holes open. Practice this for a while, until you can reliably keep the C going.

When you can do that, you are ready to smear up to C above the staff, or however high you want to go. Finger a C, crack a few fingers open while moving your embochure into the "euuuwww" position to keep the pitch down, and then slowly move your embochure toward the natural position while slowly rolling your fingers back. By the time you get to G, you can have your fingers completely off, and do the rest of the smear with your embochure.

As for the lower register, I'm not quite sure how to do it. My smear down there sounds rather rough. I also don't really know how to smear over the break.

-------------

"You have to play just right to make dissonant music sound wrong in the right way"

Post Edited (2005-03-27 15:52)

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