Listen to Open Road

What my trombone solo helps demonstrate and what I hope you'll get from it...

I didn’t originally record this improvisation as a “lesson,” but listening back, it actually illustrates a handful of things I encourage players to do when they improvise. Not as a showcase for chops, but as an example you might like of how I heard the music.

Driving on the open road
Listen to Open Road
  • 1

    Start with intent

    Don’t just spill notes. Open with something that grabs attention like an interesting sound or phrase that makes a listener lean in.

  • 2

    Use space

    Silence frames ideas. When you leave room between phrases, each thought lands more clearly and has more meaning.

  • 3

    Tell a story

    State an idea, then develop it. Embellish, vary, and let the line build toward a musical point instead of just wandering as you hunt for more notes to play.

  • 4

    Use the whole horn

    Don’t live inside one comfortable octave. Moving across a wider range adds interesting, emotion, and momentum.

  • 5

    Play with rhythm

    Let the line breathe. Break out of predictable 8th-note streams so the rhythm feels alive rather than predictable.

  • 6

    Vary articulation and note length

    Changes in attack, length, and decay shape the emotional 'envelope' of a phrase just as much as the pitches do.

All of these points lead to an important question: Does your improvisation have purpose and direction?