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    Mouthpiece too large?

    Mouthpieces & Accessories
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    • grune
      grune last edited by grune

      re locked sticky; Jens & Mouthpieces Sticky (Your MPC is TOO BIG!)

      Overall, I agree with Jens' premise. But I have seen also too many people use too small a mouthpiece.

      I think we need to distinguish between students and fully mature 'pros'.

      From age 7 to 20, a student will undergo massive changes, and thus many changes in mouthpieces and horns should be expected during the formative years. For students, the key is to provide proper guidance in the choice of hardware: as poor or mismatched can seriously impair progress. I have yet to find a golden rule for students, but I am finding my students are developing faster when they use a D-cup rather than a C-cup. By the age of 16 and after 5 years of development, most students do very well with a 3D.

      But as a standard for a 'pro', I disagree about the 3C being the ubiquitous size. For me, at the pro level, the issue is sound. True, a 3C can give a well-balanced result for tone, range, flexibility. But a 3C will not give the same tone as a 1.5C: if it does, the issue is the player. In my case, a 1.5C definitely gives a bigger, fuller, sweeter, greater dynamics than a 3C. With a 1.5C, I have no trouble to fill a concert hall with a 'teutonic' sound. I think pros should strive for 'the sound', and this means working hard to develop the chops needed to perform on a mouthpiece larger than a 3C. imho, the 1.5C is the pro standard to achieve, with larger being a matter of individual strength.

      opinions?

      Bach Stradivarius Model 37 in silver [180S37], ca 1972.

      Dr GO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Dale Proctor
        Dale Proctor last edited by

        I agree - the Bach 1-1/2C lends itself to producing a much nicer overall sound than the Bach 3C. In my experience, the 1-1/2C isn’t significantly more demanding to play than the 3C, either. I was surprised to discover that when I bought the 1-1/2C. The cup doesn’t really feel any wider than the 3C, but is a bit deeper. Disclaimer...your mileage may vary...lol

        1977 Bach Strad ML 43 trumpet
        1960 Conn 6B Victor trumpet
        1982 Bach Strad ML 239 C trumpet
        1970 Olds Ambassador Eb/D trumpet
        1993 Bach Strad L 184G cornet
        1962 Conn 9A Victor cornet
        1890 Besson A/Bb/C cornet
        1870? Henry Lehnert SARV cornet

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • Seth of Lagos
          Seth of Lagos last edited by

          It's all a compromise.

          If you've a lot of serious above staff forte+ stuff to deal with in a normal performance, you pick the piece to best survive the gig and keep the conductor off your back.

          If you haven't, you amuse yourself by scaring the 'bones with a Wick 1.

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
          • flugelgirl
            flugelgirl Qualified Repair Techs Veterans & Military Musicians last edited by

            We’re all different. I sound the same on a 1.5 as on a 3, but have to work a whole lot harder for it. That makes it an easy choice for me. Also, you have to consider the job that you’re doing - playing in a commercial setting has different needs than an orchestral setting. Different equipment for different jobs, and different faces! This is one of the many reasons I did not want to live in the orchestral world where people are so focused on one specific horn/mouthpiece combination for no real reason other than “insert famous player here” used it. When I was growing up, there were several choices of teachers I could have studied with - the orchestral teacher would not accept you in his studio unless you bought a large bore Bach and a 1C mouthpiece. The jazz and commercial teachers didn’t care what equipment you showed up with as long as it worked and you sounded good on it. That made the choice easy for me as a kid since I couldn’t afford new equipment! It ended up being a great choice since I excelled in the genre and loved the music.
            For all the amateurs out there, play what is most comfortable for you and work with it. Strive for your best possible sound, and don’t worry about it too much. Tailor your equipment around the job that YOU are doing, and it will take you farther than playing what works for someone else’s job.

            Daily players: Adams A1, A4LT, F2 flugel , CN1 cornet.
            Schagerl Raweni
            Puje 3am(named for me), Benge pocket
            Schilke P5-4, C5L
            Yamaha 761 Eb/D
            Lots of vintage toys

            grune 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
            • grune
              grune @flugelgirl last edited by

              @flugelgirl
              Much truth to your words. I could write a story... but suffice to say... in olden days I had to 'qualify' and audition to have the 'honour' to be a student of a certain orch trumpeter, which meant I had to have a Bach horn and 3C as minimum gear and be able to afford rather exorbitant fees. Then to get into the orch (I was chosen from 1000 world applicants), I had to have a silver, Bach C trumpet, again with 3C as the minimum. These days, I see a great variety of horns and colours, so things seem to have improved for orch members.
              .... which leads to another question....
              with so many excellent horns and brands these days, are we living in a golden age?

              Bach Stradivarius Model 37 in silver [180S37], ca 1972.

              Dale Proctor Newell Post Dr GO 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • Dale Proctor
                Dale Proctor @grune last edited by

                @grune said in Mouthpiece too large?:

                .... which leads to another question....
                with so many excellent horns and brands these days, are we living in a golden age?

                I suppose I’m still living in the past with a silver Bb Strad and a silver C Strad...lol. I did break the mold a bit with a very fancy lacquered Bach 184 cornet, though. 😉

                1977 Bach Strad ML 43 trumpet
                1960 Conn 6B Victor trumpet
                1982 Bach Strad ML 239 C trumpet
                1970 Olds Ambassador Eb/D trumpet
                1993 Bach Strad L 184G cornet
                1962 Conn 9A Victor cornet
                1890 Besson A/Bb/C cornet
                1870? Henry Lehnert SARV cornet

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • Newell Post
                  Newell Post @grune last edited by Newell Post

                  @grune Yes, we are living in a golden age. I love the vintage horns, but the modern ones are more consistent and more reliable. You also have many more choices today in terms of materials, geometry, and many other variables. And trumpets are cheap compared to many other instruments. When you can buy a slightly used top of the line, professional trumpet for about $1,500, that's a golden age. If you really want to spend $10K on a trumpet, you can. But you don't need to.

                  Bb: Bach 180S37G (05), Mercedes (80)
                  Vintage: Committee (54), Recording (59), Super (49), Getzen Severinsen (66)
                  C: Kanstul 1510, Constellation
                  D/Eb: Getzen Eterna
                  Cornet: Schilke XA1, Yamaha Neo Eb
                  Flugel: Kanstul 1525, Yamaha 625
                  Conch shell in F

                  grune 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • grune
                    grune @Newell Post last edited by grune

                    @Newell-Post ... to your points... so true. Compared to prices of many violins, trumpets are 'disposables'. Even 'student' level violins can be +$100k. crazy.

                    https://tarisio.com/auctions/notable-sales/lady-blunt-stradivarius-of-1721/

                    Bach Stradivarius Model 37 in silver [180S37], ca 1972.

                    administrator 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • Dr GO
                      Dr GO @grune last edited by

                      @grune said in Mouthpiece too large?:

                      @flugelgirl

                      with so many excellent horns and brands these days, are we living in a golden age?

                      Not so sure as the Martin Committees, Olds Super Recordings of 1930's vintage were of golden age quality. Was the 30's and 40's that start of the golden age?

                      Allora Pocket Trumpet 2014
                      Harrelson Summit 2017
                      Kanstul 1526 2012
                      Getzen Power Bore 1961
                      Getzen Eterna 4-Valve Fulgelhorn 1974
                      Martin Committee 1946
                      Olds Super Recording 1940
                      Olds Recording (LA) 1953
                      Olds Recording (Fullerton) 1967
                      Olds Ambassador 1965

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • administrator
                        administrator Global Moderator @grune last edited by

                        @grune said in Mouthpiece too large?:

                        @Newell-Post ... to your points... so true. Compared to prices of many violins, trumpets are 'disposables'. Even 'student' level violins can be +$100k. crazy.

                        https://tarisio.com/auctions/notable-sales/lady-blunt-stradivarius-of-1721/

                        Can't Monettes cost $30k+? I mean, that's not $100k, granted, but it is, at the end of the day, a brass pipe.

                        Dr GO Newell Post 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • Dr GO
                          Dr GO @administrator last edited by

                          @administrator said in Mouthpiece too large?:

                          Can't Monettes cost $30k+? I mean, that's not $100k, granted, but it is, at the end of the day, a brass pipe.

                          But a very purdy brass pipe!

                          Allora Pocket Trumpet 2014
                          Harrelson Summit 2017
                          Kanstul 1526 2012
                          Getzen Power Bore 1961
                          Getzen Eterna 4-Valve Fulgelhorn 1974
                          Martin Committee 1946
                          Olds Super Recording 1940
                          Olds Recording (LA) 1953
                          Olds Recording (Fullerton) 1967
                          Olds Ambassador 1965

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • Dr GO
                            Dr GO last edited by Dr GO

                            My Harrelson Brass Pipe is now selling for around $14,000:
                            6c14b2ff-3d51-4b21-954b-7c701a635cb6-image.png

                            Allora Pocket Trumpet 2014
                            Harrelson Summit 2017
                            Kanstul 1526 2012
                            Getzen Power Bore 1961
                            Getzen Eterna 4-Valve Fulgelhorn 1974
                            Martin Committee 1946
                            Olds Super Recording 1940
                            Olds Recording (LA) 1953
                            Olds Recording (Fullerton) 1967
                            Olds Ambassador 1965

                            Vulgano Brother GeorgeB 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 1
                            • Vulgano Brother
                              Vulgano Brother @Dr GO last edited by

                              @Dr-GO said in Mouthpiece too large?:

                              My Harrelson Brass Pipe is now selling for around $14,000:

                              People will pay you that much not to play? Guess I should have become a jazz musician!

                              Kehaulani 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • Newell Post
                                Newell Post @administrator last edited by Newell Post

                                @administrator The Monette costs about $10K. The artsy-fartsy decoration accounts for the rest.

                                Bb: Bach 180S37G (05), Mercedes (80)
                                Vintage: Committee (54), Recording (59), Super (49), Getzen Severinsen (66)
                                C: Kanstul 1510, Constellation
                                D/Eb: Getzen Eterna
                                Cornet: Schilke XA1, Yamaha Neo Eb
                                Flugel: Kanstul 1525, Yamaha 625
                                Conch shell in F

                                Dr GO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • Dr GO
                                  Dr GO @Newell Post last edited by Dr GO

                                  @Newell-Post said in Mouthpiece too large?:

                                  @administrator The Monette costs about $10K. The artsy-fartsy decoration accounts for the rest.

                                  Then such a deal I got. The artsy-fartsy note with serpent in the tuning slide on my Harrelson only cost me $300! But what was really cool is Jason used my design.... Come to think of it, he has used that insert for horns after making mine. Perhaps I should be getting design royalties?

                                  Allora Pocket Trumpet 2014
                                  Harrelson Summit 2017
                                  Kanstul 1526 2012
                                  Getzen Power Bore 1961
                                  Getzen Eterna 4-Valve Fulgelhorn 1974
                                  Martin Committee 1946
                                  Olds Super Recording 1940
                                  Olds Recording (LA) 1953
                                  Olds Recording (Fullerton) 1967
                                  Olds Ambassador 1965

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • Kehaulani
                                    Kehaulani Credentialed Professional @Vulgano Brother last edited by

                                    @Vulgano-Brother said in Mouthpiece too large?:
                                    People will pay you that much not to play? Guess I should have become a jazz musician!

                                    He's a doctor who plays jazz.

                                    Benge 3X
                                    Martin Committee
                                    Getzen Capri Cornet
                                    Adams F-1 Flugelhorn

                                    "If you don't live it, it won't come out of your horn."
                                    Charlie Parker

                                    "Even if I could play like Wynton Marsalis, I wouldn't play like Wynton Marsalis."
                                    Chet Baker

                                    Dr GO 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • Dale Proctor
                                      Dale Proctor last edited by

                                      And another thread jumps the shark...

                                      1977 Bach Strad ML 43 trumpet
                                      1960 Conn 6B Victor trumpet
                                      1982 Bach Strad ML 239 C trumpet
                                      1970 Olds Ambassador Eb/D trumpet
                                      1993 Bach Strad L 184G cornet
                                      1962 Conn 9A Victor cornet
                                      1890 Besson A/Bb/C cornet
                                      1870? Henry Lehnert SARV cornet

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • Kehaulani
                                        Kehaulani Credentialed Professional last edited by

                                        On my recording of Pictures at an Exhibition with some fearless solo work by Bud Herseth as done on a 7C. His sound sounds big enough to me.

                                        If you want to refer to "pros" it would be nice to know what you mean. I knew scads of pros who used, by your definition, small mouthpieces. I got a back-up mouthpiece from Ray Triscari that was like a drilled out dime.

                                        Benge 3X
                                        Martin Committee
                                        Getzen Capri Cornet
                                        Adams F-1 Flugelhorn

                                        "If you don't live it, it won't come out of your horn."
                                        Charlie Parker

                                        "Even if I could play like Wynton Marsalis, I wouldn't play like Wynton Marsalis."
                                        Chet Baker

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • GeorgeB
                                          GeorgeB @Dr GO last edited by

                                          @Dr-GO
                                          That is one gorgeous horn, Doc.

                                          1960s King Super 20 Silversonic, 1940 Olds Recording, 1942 Buescher True Tone 400 ,1999 Conn Vintage One Bb trumpet, A 1952 Selmer Paris, A 2020 Getzen 400 and a Manchester Brass ACB custom pro Bb trumpet, a 1962 Conn Victor 5A Cornet.

                                          Kehaulani 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • Kehaulani
                                            Kehaulani Credentialed Professional @GeorgeB last edited by Kehaulani

                                            @GeorgeB said in Mouthpiece too large?:
                                            That is one gorgeous horn, Doc.

                                            I think it's gaudy bling. Goes to show you how differing tastes can be.

                                            There was a Filipino family that lived a few houses down from me that re-painted their house. Purple. Looked beautiful to them.

                                            Benge 3X
                                            Martin Committee
                                            Getzen Capri Cornet
                                            Adams F-1 Flugelhorn

                                            "If you don't live it, it won't come out of your horn."
                                            Charlie Parker

                                            "Even if I could play like Wynton Marsalis, I wouldn't play like Wynton Marsalis."
                                            Chet Baker

                                            Dr GO GeorgeB 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
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