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 Fatigue while playing
Author: Radovan 
Date:   2024-10-26 23:00

Hello. I am currently a third-year student at the music academy. The program has become more and more demanding and complicated, and therefore I practice more than before. Recently, I have a problem that after a few beats of etudes, pieces, or concerts, I feel pressure behind my ears and pulsation, when my air is almost used up. This happens with any reed, thick or thin. Is there a method to solve this, or an exercise? Thank you very much.

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 Re: Fatigue while playing
Author: Paul Aviles 
Date:   2024-10-27 04:17

Just a guess, but this sounds more like some sort of medical issue that has come up recently. Pressure within the head could involve your sinuses. I'd get medically checked out if I were you.




............Paul Aviles



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 Re: Fatigue while playing
Author: Philip Caron 
Date:   2024-10-27 04:51

Paul is correct, have it medically checked. I also might self-check my bp & heart rate when you get the symptoms. Also, maybe take a covid test. All good data for you and your doctor.

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 Re: Fatigue while playing
Author: LFabian 
Date:   2024-10-27 06:29

I find breaks, water and chewing gum helpful. See a physician if you are diabetic.

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 Re: Fatigue while playing
Author: ruben 
Date:   2024-10-27 10:01

Ideally, you would find a doctor that plays, or has played a wind instrument and has first-hand knowledge of what this physically involves. There are many out there.

rubengreenbergparisfrance@gmail.com


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 Re: Fatigue while playing
Author: kurth83 
Date:   2024-10-28 09:00

We have had this kind discussion before here. Ppl report medical problems that amount to some kind of overuse injury (RSI).

The internet is littered with ppl who "played through the pain" and permanently injured themselves and never played again. History records musicians who did the same. I am told that Shubert famously ruined his hands and permanently lost much of his piano playing for example.

The easy solution is to back off (less playing) and hope it goes away (which works well for most young people, but not for ppl who are getting older and need to accept that their bodies cannot produce the same level of output any more).

We also have stories of young ppl here who suffered pretty serious injury and did back off, and were able to completely recover their playing. You want to be one of them. :-)

You will ALWAYS run up against your physical limitations as a dedicated musician (at least that's my experience), might as well learn early that it's a lifetime balancing act, to nurse as much out of your body without injuring it as you can.

All this presumes it is a simple RSI that backing off can fix. If it doesn't you may have a worse problem.

It can't hurt to see a doctor.

Aging classical trumpet player beginning to learn clarinet as a second.

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