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Welcome !

Browse the Lessons, Stories, and Store
A Place For Trumpet Lovers

 • Pages for Students
 * Discussions for Church Musicians
 * Quality Mouthpiece Tops
 * Hundreds of Pages, and Pictures

New Tips every week! - valuable tools for all abilities!

View Training videos at my UTUBE Channel, and ask questions here or on my FaceBook page  George Rawlin
     





                    Direct Link to my UTube Channel

Follow me on Face Book too.   George Rawlin



Listen and watch the gRawlin#1 Top as played by Chris Jaudes on Hair. He is also the man behind the B&S JBX Challenger trumpet.



This is the long awaited Flugel mouthpiece. Same exact gRawlin Rim as the other models. A deeper than normal flugel cup and the 18 throat combine to give a solid - locked in sound.

Medium dark with great flexibility and yet not "mushy".

Perfect for Jazz, and Brass Band work. Not over-powering at all, but has a real nice "carry" to the sound.

Priced as a custom made, one-piece flugel mouthpiece. $129.00 in our store.

Due to the custom work, there will be no discounts available.

gR

Order your Air-Play DVD today!
               Click Here
                        
Re-Vitalize your chops



Now Available - The Original Roy Stevens #1 Mouthpiece

This is the original rim, cup, throat, and backbore on a cool Art Decco blank.
The KING of the Lead mouthpieces available now!  
$120.00 in our store.

Flugelhorn one-piece mouthpiece coming soon!!

gRawlin Mouthpiece Tops (Cup & Rim)
Threaded for Warburton back bores!
Set them up
just the way you like.  

         gRawlin    #1 Hardcore Lead Players !
         gRawlin    #2 Centered & Projecting - All Around Playing
       
  gRawlin    #3 Classical and Jazz - depending on Backbore
  
What the players are saying:

Chris Jaudes  NYC - One of the busiest players around
"Hey George....Ok...found a backbore that got me the sound I wanted.....I LOVE the number 1 !!!!!!!!! I cannot miss ANYTHING!!!!! Thanks for making it....I love it!!!"...It was a (Warburton) 7b that did the trick. It's interesting....We dig the same backbores. Hope all continues to go well for you. Thank you.....I am a big fan.
Chris


Chris R. Kalamazoo - 33rd Street Band
Hi George,  I just love it!  The sound seems to cut through just great, and I can hear myself better in our loud band.  I would describe the sound as focused, compact, and extremely resonant with the fullest overtones that I think I've ever played with.  It helps me not deviate from the airplay method.  Also, I am more accurate with tonguing now--drastic reduction in "cuffed" notes during challenging articulation.
   Great job on a great mouthpiece!   Take care, Chris Rysenga  - 33rd Street Band

Rick Stone - Noted Gospel Trumpet Soloist
"I love the #2 with the QM backbore. What a sound!"

Free written exercises in PDF form - AirPlay practice sheets

Here is a direct download of the entire set plus some
additions - Click Here



Here is a Beautiful Player that uses most of the concepts of AirPlay. Watch this video and notice what I am talking about. RELAXED air flow with the top lip brought down below the teeth edges and the large muscles supporting the lips.
                                                                                                 Clik the picture


        

       WHAT'S SO DIFFERENT
           ABOUT AIR-PLAY ?

What we do here is strip playing the trumpet down to the most basic essentials. We set an overview of what needs to happen when you play, and show you how to make it happen for YOU!

This is not a place to learn to play in 6 easy lessons. What you will learn is how to become a player over a life-time of experience with your ever changing body and mind.

Most players don't know what a good tone is. They have not set this in their minds' ear. They have no picture of the set-up,approach to a note, or the execution of a phrase. What they do have is a desire to make some music come out of the horn and not be embarrassed about it.

We learn in steps, plateau, then move on. We fall back into old habits, we get suckered into new methods. We do not have control of our playing lives. Now I will lead you by many different types of instruction. Visual, Audible, comparison, rote, repetition, example, written, and felt.




The Rawlin Name traces roots back to 1500. Originally Rolf, Rolfe, Rolan, Rolin, Rolins, Rawlings, Rawling, Rawlins, and when Grandfather Will Rawlin Came across the ocean blue he dropped the (s) and we are now RAWLIN.

English with a small touch of Irish and German

To see a little of the George Wesley Rawlin Family  Click the Family Crest



                                                                 

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