Advise please!
Advise please!
18:21 on Sunday, February 3, 2008
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Le_Tromboniste (180 points)
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I'm currently shopping for a new mouthpiece, I'm tired of my old Bach 6½AL : It doesn't help my high register, it ruins my articulations and attacks, and it gives me somewhat of a airy tone, so change is needed.
I tried a couple of mouthpieces at my local music store (Schilke 51D, Bach 3G to 5G, Wick 3AL to 6AL, Yamaha Alain Trudel Signature, Yamaha Canadian Brass Signature and Christian Lindberg 2CL). I liked 3 of them better than the others : the Schilke, Alain Trudel and Lindberg. I've tried each of them for a week (This week it's the Schilke's turn) and I have a problem choosing the right one.
The problem is, both the Schilke and the Lindberg improve my playing, but they help on different aspects, while the Alain Trudel is a bit of a compromise between the two of them.
The Lindberg mouthpiece gives me a more concentrated and brilliant tone, a bit more airy than the Schilke. It also improves my attacks and articulation a lot and my endurance is better than with my 6½AL.
The Schilke 51D gives me a dark tone, and surprisingly, it helps stabilizing my high register better thant the Limdberg. I think it's also a little bit better for my endurance. But it's not very good for my articulation, and my flexibility is not very good.
The Trudel is a bit between the two...my tone is less brilliant than the Lindberg but not as dark as the Schilke. articulation is average. High register is average (both the Lindberg and Schilke are better). Flexibility is also average.
Something I remembered is that many people told me that with any equipment, my tone will come back to what is natural for me, so maybe I should not consider the quality of tone as a deciding factor.
What I'd like to do is try a 4CL (which should be better for high register than the 2CL) but they dont sell them at my local music store.
So what do you think? What should I do?
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Re: Advise please!
23:13 on Tuesday, February 5, 2008
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Re: Advise please!
14:12 on Wednesday, February 6, 2008
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Re: Advise please!
17:12 on Wednesday, February 6, 2008
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Re: Advise please!
19:31 on Wednesday, February 6, 2008
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Re: Advise please!
19:41 on Wednesday, February 6, 2008
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Re: Advise please!
09:48 on Friday, February 8, 2008
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JOhnlovemusic (1279 points)
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Initially, I would suggest the compromise (the Yamaha Alain Trudel Signature), or if you have the money you can have someone make a mouthpiece with the Schilke 51D rim and the body of another.
Check out this website, there are lots of links. You can probably call any one of them and tell them what you are trying for and what you like. Then get a 3 part mouthpiece they think is closest to your wants. If you don’t like something instead of buying a complete mouthpiece you can change just the rim, etc.
http://musicmoz.org/Instruments/Wind/Brass/Trombone/Mouthpieces/
When a friend of mine was looking to try new mouthpieces he sent an email to all his music friends with a list of the mouthpieces he wanted to try and asked if anyone knew people who had some he could try. Within 2 weeks he had about 20 mouthpieces borrowed from others. He ended up picking one he liked and instead of buying new, the person loaning it to him sold it for $5 because they were never going to use it again.
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Re: Advise please!
15:45 on Friday, February 8, 2008
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Re: Advise please!
16:18 on Saturday, February 9, 2008
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Re: Advise please!
16:54 on Tuesday, February 12, 2008
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Re: Advise please!
23:04 on Tuesday, February 19, 2008
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Re: Advise please!
02:05 on Friday, March 21, 2008
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Re: Advise please!
06:17 on Friday, March 21, 2008
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Re: Advise please!
13:45 on Friday, March 21, 2008
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Re: Advise please!
13:55 on Friday, March 21, 2008
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Erik (218 points)
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I've got to go with Steve here. Actually, I have to go a bit further.
Mouthpieces make a HUGE difference on the sound that your horn puts out. You want to find a piece that feels great for you, and compliments your playing style. As well as one that compliments and works well with your horn.
For example. I am a large guy, 6-1 210lbs, and I've been a cyclist for 20 or so years, so I am in great shape, and my lungs are ultra powerful. I put out a massive sound, so I need equipment that will not break up in the loud registers. I used several pieces in college, looking for the right fit. I started on a Bach 6 1/2, too small. Bach 5G. Still too small. Bach 4 was closer, but still just did not feel great. Then I took on an experiment, and tried out a Marcinkowicz George Roberts Custom bass piece, around a 1.5 or 1.75. Even on principle work, I liked the sound, but realistically, it was too big, and my endurance suffered. Switched to a Warburton 5, which felt good, much better than the Bachs, and gave me a little more control over my sound.
It still felt a bit small, and I felt like it was holding me back in the loud sections in orchestral playing. ESPECIALLY after I got my new Edwards. Better control, sound quality, and clarity in projection than the Bach, but still I needed something a bit larger. So I went with the Warburton Modular system, and used a 7ST with the ST backbore. A larger piece than the 5, and the ST backbore was more open, leading to better flow all over. I liked that a lot, but the rim just did not feel right. The rim and bowl just never really felt awesome.
So a friend of mine was testing Griego mouthpieces, and let me blow on one. In 1 minute I was in love. I went the next weekend to Peninsula Music in Palo Alto (I think, maybe Mountain View) and tested Griego sizes 3, 3M, and 3 1/2. The 3 1/2 felt good, very free in the upper register, but did feel a bit on the small and congested side. I played on the other two back and forth for about an hour at the shop, and the deciding factor came down to two pieces. I played the Prelude from Bach's Cello Suite No. 2 on each, and the 3 felt much better than the 3M. Then I went through my excerpts, and when I got to Mahler 3, the 3 just filled up the room with sound with hardly any effort, and could control my sound output without breaking up. And above all else, the sound was equally free in all registers, from the low C to the high G in the Prelude, as well as that pesky low A in Mahler 3.
Long story sort, we should not put too much faith in the equipment we play, in the end it really is up to us to put out that sound, but once you reach certain levels in your playing, you sometimes make physical or mental changes that require equipment changes. The mouthpiece is the microphone of the sound. (If you imagine it like I do, the sound/pitch starts from your lip buzz, carried forward by the moving air. The the mic/mouthpiece picks up the sound, and sends through to the amplifier/trombone, and finally out the loudspeaker/bell.) You want this mic to be something that you are happy with. Something that not only feels good and comfortable, but also puts out the color of sound that you want, and that is appropriate for the group you play with.
On a side note, I've often wondered what guys like Joe Alessi would sound like if he stuck a Bach 12C into his Edwards. It would probably still be amazing, but nothing like the Big Joe we have all gotten used to.
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