I am starting this thread looking for some advice. I was hired recently to teach at a local band camp. This marching band unfortunately only has two [2] piccolo players, two clarinetists, and about 6 saxes. Quite a small woodwind section. I was hired to teach the piccs, and when I recieved my instructions from the band director, I was absolutely shocked about what he was asking for.
Because there are only two of them, and both of them are fairly new to the switch from flute to piccolo, their tone is suffering. They can get a sound out, and play the notes and rythms, however their tone is lacking. Thus he wants me to work on tone studies to help them achieve a better sound and to project more. So, in my 3 hour long sectional with them, I have to spend at least 1.5 hours working on tone studies alone..... preferably two hours....


It is driving myself and the two players absolutely nuts. Tone studies are boring enough as it is, but when playing around 2 hours of them, it is revolting. I would spend more time on the music, but their part isnt very hard, and they can already play it rather well.
Any ideas for how to make tone studies fun? I am at a loss with finding fun ways to do tone studies.
I am trying to keep it interesting by offering compliments and constructive criticism, and by interjecting bits of piccolo pedagogy. But, this job lasts all week, three hours a day, and I am running out of ideas. I really want to do a good job because for my area and age/qualifications, I am getting paid rather well [roughly 20 dollars an hour-- players in the area with doctorate degrees only get paid 30 dollars an hour for this type of thing].
Any suggestions would be great.