Expanding Your Overall Range in Improvisation

Is your improvisation limited by your range?

I don’t mean the range of notes you can play, but other more important considerations. Here are six musical attributes that players often limit themselves within:

  • Note range – Improvising within a narrow range of notes, perhaps only within an octave.
  • Dynamic range – Improvising within a limited mezzo forte or forte dynamic through an entire solo.
  • Articulation range – Improvising using a narrow range of articulations, typically only basic legato articulations. Each note is attacked in the same way and the same length (especially wind players).
  • Phrase length range – Each phrase within an improvisation is pretty much the same length. Similarly, each phrase may start and stop on the same place within the bar or beat.
  • Rhythmic Range – Playing every musical idea using the same basic rhythm, typically eighth notes or some repetitive pattern (daa da daa da daa da daa…).
  • Harmonic range – Playing only within the diatonic center of the tune instead of exploring outside the basic harmony and scales related to the changes.

I’m going to divide these topics into separate posts, each discussing one of the above attributes. In this post I want to address the most basic, which is note range limitations and how to work your way free out of that limitation.

Note Range

For each of these improvisational limitations, including this one, I suggest listening to a recording of your playing. Find something representative of your playing that you’ve recorded in the recent past and listen to it. Neither the best nor the worst. In this case, you are listening for the range of notes within your improvised phrases. (High notes to low notes.)

Do your lines seem to circle around a limited range of an octave or so?

Expanding your note range will help your improvisation become more expressive and elicit a more emotional response within your listener. Just listen to any great player and you’ll hear how their wide range of notes adds an emotional element to their playing. Here’s one example with David Sanborn. I’ve always loved how he twists those high notes to wring out the emotion in them. Listen to his solo around 2:20.

How to Practice Expanding Your Note Range

While playing over a rhythm track or with a rhythm section, as an exercise, start on one of your lowest notes and play some sort of scale or interval arpeggiation up to one of your highest notes. This is obviously easier for piano players than us trombone players, but regardless of your instrument, practice stretching above and below your normal comfortable solo range.

Then start on a high note and work your way down to a low note using some sort of simple scale or interval arpeggiation. By doing this, you are getting the feel for expanding your range.

Next, hold a high note and work your way down in some sort of musical phrase. High notes elicit emotion that notes in the middle of your range don’t as easily. We all know the cheap way for wind players to get a crowd response is to hold a high note. I’m not necessarily intending this to provide a hack for cheap audience response, but it does work for a reason. The human scream is usually a high pitch. It grabs our attention and makes us feel anxious.

But you can also express emotion in working your way up from a low note to a high one within the same phrase. Here’s another example of someone who took full advantage of his range on trumpet: Kenny Wheeler. Listen to his solo starting around 2:40. And while you’re listening to this track, check out Michael Brecker’s solo. One of Michael’s great skills was using the full range (and then some) of the tenor.

While you practice or rehearse, force yourself to explore the higher and lower regions of your instrument. It may at first be difficult because you’re not used to playing in those more extreme ranges of your instrument. You don’t have comfortable licks up and down there and may even have trouble with scales and keys in those extended ranges.

That might give you something new to practice. When practicing scales and patterns, play them in the extended ranges low and high. Start doing that while keeping in mind that all growth comes from outside your comfort zone!

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Picture of Michael Lake

Michael Lake

Trombonist, author, marketer, & tech guy

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