By Dr. Logan Chopyk
I first heard about anchor tonguing at UCLA in 2006 from a fellow student trumpet player. At the time, I hadn’t thought much about how I played the trombone at all. I figured I just needed to put in the hours in the practice room, and I would inevitably improve. However, the more I have learned about and experimented with anchor tonguing over the years, the more convinced I am that it shouldn’t just be an alternative method—it should be a mainstream piece of technical knowledge for all brass players. Given what we know today about acoustic physics and human anatomy, it might just be a best practice.
The Invisible Art and the Guild Secret
To understand why anchor tonguing isn’t universally taught, we have to look back at the history of our craft. For centuries, brass playing was an oral tradition heavily guarded by tight-knit communities. In the Renaissance and Baroque eras, trumpet playing was literally a guild secret; keeping techniques hidden was a deliberate strategy to inflate the prices and status of court trumpeters.
Because the actual mechanics of playing a brass instrument happen entirely inside the body, it is largely invisible and not necessarily intuitive. The way people play brass instruments is very much a mystery—often even to the players themselves! This invisibility naturally breeds guarded secrets and guesswork. It reminds me of a concept from Victor Wooten’s book, The Music Lesson, in which he playfully describes an idea for an invention: the “lick blocker.” This device would cover the hands of a guitarist so audience members and rival players couldn’t steal their licks. Brass players have had a built-in “lick blocker” for centuries: our faces.
So, what exactly is anchor tonguing? In conventional tonguing, the tip of the tongue strikes the back of the upper teeth or the roof of the mouth. In anchor tonguing (often advocated by modern pedagogues looking to optimize airflow and embouchure efficiency), the tip of the tongue remains permanently rested—or “anchored”—against the back of the bottom teeth or the bottom lip. Articulation is instead handled by the middle or front-dorsum of the tongue striking the hard palate.
Weighing the Pros and Cons
Like any technique, anchor tonguing shifts the mechanical balance of playing. Here is how the trade-offs generally break down:
The Benefits:
- Immediacy of Sound: The note speaks almost instantly, with less delay between the tongue stroke and the tone production.
- Stability and Tone: It provides a highly stable, dense tone center. The tongue is already in the resonant position for the tone during articulation.
- Improved Range: Players often report an unlocking of both the extreme high and low registers.
- Speed and Consistency: It allows for incredibly fast articulation and creates a more consistent, reliable playing experience across registers.
- Ease of Playing: Once mastered, it often feels like it requires less sheer physical effort to produce a resonant sound.
The Drawbacks:
- A “Different” Aesthetic: Some players feel it yields a slightly less “pretty” or less nuanced sound compared to conventional methods.
- Lack of “Fanfare”: It minimizes the percussive articulation sound. Instead of a little fanfare at the front of every note, it sounds as though the tone is simply being turned on and off.
- The Learning Curve: Because it rewires years of habit, it can feel highly unnatural and frustrating to players at first.
Fascia, Airflow, and “Mewing”
One of the most intriguing arguments for anchor tonguing comes from modern anatomical understanding, specifically regarding the body’s fascial networks. The Deep Frontal Line is a continuous plane of fascia that runs from the bottom of the feet, up through the diaphragm, heart, and lungs, all the way to the tongue.
When the tongue is anchored and engaged properly, it may actually improve overall airflow by taking the structural weight of this fascial line off the connected segments in the chest. By stabilizing the top of the Deep Frontal Line, the breathing apparatus operates more freely. Interestingly, this aligns perfectly with modern orthodontic and anatomical trends regarding tongue posture, commonly known as “mewing”—where resting the tongue against the palate is used to stabilize the jaw and open the airway.
Helmholtz Resonators and Acoustic Physics
From a purely acoustic standpoint, the way we shape our mouths matters immensely. Our mouth and chest act as Helmholtz resonators, cavities of air that resonate at specific frequencies and drive the overall resonance of the brass instrument.
Anchor tonguing seems to naturally provide a mathematically superior resonant shape in the oral cavity. Conventional tongue placement often leaves an awkward, turbulent amount of space behind the bottom teeth. Conversely, anchor tonguing creates a smooth, gradual expansion of space from the tightest point of constriction (between the dorsum of the tongue and the hard palate) out toward the teeth and lips. This streamlined funnel reduces acoustic turbulence and maximizes the efficiency of the resonance being fed into the mouthpiece.
A Neurological Bypass
Finally, there is a fascinating neurological application for this technique. Brass playing requires highly complex, deeply ingrained neural pathways. Sometimes, these pathways become corrupted, leading to career-threatening conditions like focal dystonia.
Because anchor tonguing utilizes an entirely different set of muscles and motor commands to articulate, it essentially acts as a brand-new neurological pathway. This is akin to the story of Alex Klein, the renowned principal oboist of the Chicago Symphony, who famously altered the keywork and his grip on the oboe to successfully bypass his corrupted neural pathways caused by focal dystonia. For brass players struggling with similar neurological misfires, anchor tonguing isn’t just a different way to play—it could be a lifeline.
It is time we stop letting the invisible mechanics of brass playing remain a mystery. By looking at our instruments through the lens of acoustics, anatomy, and neurology, techniques like anchor tonguing move from the realm of “strange alternatives” into the category of profound, scientifically backed best practices.