Wynton Marsalis trumpet
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Does Marsalis use the same trumpet for classical and jazz?
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@curlydoc No.
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@curlydoc
For jazz most of the videos I've seen him in he is playing his Monette Prana. The trumpets I've see him using for classical music I can't identify but they are definitely not his Monette Prana. -
@curlydoc Wyntons classical recordings are relatively old. I remember the Hummel on a Schilke Eb and the Picc stuff also on a Schilke.
I think that if he were to make a current recording, he probably would get a made to purpose horn from Dave Monette. -
@rowuk said in Wynton Marsalis trumpet:
I think that if he were to make a current recording, he probably would get a made to purpose horn from Dave Monette.
Yes, I would definitely agree.
I do recall seeing and listening to a video where he accompanies a classical female singer, and he was playing a Flugel, which was probably a Monette. I wish I had saved the video because Wynton was heavier and older than those early videos of him playing the Haydn Trumpet Concertos.
George -
He doesn't play classical. I don't think he has since the 1980s or 1990s. Back then, I believe that he played a Bach Vindabona trumpet with a 72 bell.
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@administrator said in Wynton Marsalis trumpet:
He doesn't play classical. I don't think he has since the 1980s or 1990s. Back then, I believe that he played a Bach Vindabona trumpet with a 72 bell.
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I owned one of those Bach Vindabona 72 trumpets. One of the trumpets I regret ever selling.
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The spam from Spain is mainly a big fat pain.
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@newell-post said in Wynton Marsalis trumpet:
The spam from Spain is mainly a big fat pain.
Well, you know-the pain from Spain falls mainly in the plain.
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@kehaulani
Please explain -
It's a play on words on the old elocution exercise, "The rain in Spain stays mainly on the plain".
There's (or was) a well-known Rogers & Hammerstein song in "My Fair Lady" that uses it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xmADMB2utAohis phrase. -
@kehaulani said in Wynton Marsalis trumpet:
It's a play on words on the old elocution exercise, "The rain in Spain stays mainly on the plain".
There's (or was) a well-known Rogers & Hammerstein song in "My Fair Lady" that uses it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xmADMB2utAohis phrase.Yes. I knew that. My post was an addition to the poem, which also rhymed, in case you didn’t notice. “……mainly on the plain” please explain. See?
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Rather obtuse, LOL But yes. I get it.
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@kehaulani said in Wynton Marsalis trumpet:
Rather obtuse, LOL But yes. I get it.
I thought it was acute one -
The spam from Spain is plainly just a pain.
There. That's better.