@robcs Well, mine is exactly the same. I had a friend test play it as well - pro player with 25 years of playing in London West End musicals under his belt - and he wanted to take if off me for a whopping € 1,500 at once. Did not get it. I've had a number of C trumpets in my time - I started off with a Bach Strad 239, then had a Strad rotary, a Stomvi Elite C, a 1940 Couesnon, a Votruba rotary C (which I only play-tested for a friend of mine who wanted it to top a friend's gold-plated Lechner - which it did), but the Gaudet is the one that fits me best. It came with a #1 Tilz mouthpiece which suited it very well indeed, but for me it does best with my regular Bach Megatone 1C, or with my Stomvi Mouthpiece System on 1 B configuration.
As to being an intermediate/student horn... I've recently got info from another player who used to visit the Courtois works pretty regularly that Courtois did not produce different lines per se. That's why there is the Courtois stamp on the valve block. They produced the basic trumpet (i.e. without additional triggers and rings and the like) and then had their quality control guys go over the hooters. Anything that was not 110% perfect (little blobs in the lacquer, minute scratches and the like) was then branded Gaudet, while the perfect horns got the AC pinky ring and were branded Courtois.
As to 3rd valve rings - mine has an underslung one so as to make space on the upperside of valve #3 for a lyre holder.

Posts made by barliman2001
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RE: GAUDET C trumpet
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RE: The star license coming a year from now and getting one
@FranklinD Well, that was before the Schengen treaty which made almost all of the EU into one common travel area, at a time when all teenagers were suspected of being revolutionary hippies...
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RE: The star license coming a year from now and getting one
@FranklinD Just for the fun of it - trying out whether it would work. I had my passport with me anyway.
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RE: The star license coming a year from now and getting one
At any rate, gone are the days when anything went through... I remember flying from Ireland to London Heathrow using an expired German target shooting club membership card as ID...
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RE: Good example of a bad example
@Shifty You forgot a few things:
- the 33 guitar players who argue how Jimi Hendrix would have done it
- the 17 blues singers who make sad songs about the fate of the old bulb
- the conductor who holds the bulb and waits for the world to revolve around him
- the trumpet player who holds the bulb while seven other trumpet players drink until the room is spinning
- the viola player who holds the bulb fitting instead of the bulb
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RE: Kinneil Band Fire
I'm overjoyed to announce that yesterday, Kinneil Band were crowned First Section Champions in the British Nationals, as the first Scottish band ever to achieve this! That's a blaze of glory for you!
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RE: A little humour
@SSmith1226 In the same spirit: How do you describe a marriage? A marriage consist of two people. One is always right, and the other is the husband.
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RE: Kinneil Band Fire
@Dr-Mark Thank you for your offer. Yes, I am connected to Kinneil Band as I learnt my cornet playing there, organized a long concert tour of Bavaria for them and as a result I am honoured to be an Honorary Member of the band and their only Honorary Conductor. However, I am not involved in any of the day-to-day running of the band including the financing of the "Rebound". For all these details including their Justgiving page etc. please contact the Band Secretary, Robert Doherty, on robertdoherty@blueyonder.co.uk. He will be able to put you onto the right path.
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RE: Kinneil Band Fire
By this time it has been revealed that the reason for the fire was wilful arson at the sports grounds.
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Kinneil Band Fire
A disastrous fire at the Newtonpark Sports Ground in Bo'ness, Scotland, involved Kinneil Unison Band's bandhall. The recently refurbished bandhall, originally built in 1858 by Scottish Miners in their spare time to house their band is a total loss and so are all the contents (all percussion instruments, most of the brass instruments including their youth band's instruments, all uniforms and a sheet music archive dating back to the early 1800s. The band - who are qualified to play at the National Finals in Cheltenham in a few weeks - are devastated. Any help is appreciated. Please contact the Band Secretary Robert Doherty through the band's website, www.kinneilband.co.uk.
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RE: Buescher Trumpets
@Osren said in Buescher Trumpets:
The early 60s Aristocrats were STILL good quality horns.... by the time the 70s rolled around, they were "good" horns, but not made with the LOVE and craftsmenship of previous years.
I'm with you there. But the "real" Aristocrats were the instruments of the 1930s and 1940s. My 265 cornet is dated 1931...
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RE: I don't know what that is, but I want one!
If you read that page closely and look at the picture gallery, it is described there as the new bass trumpet.
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RE: A little humour
As regards "Knock knock..."
An old lady had a parrot and a TV. One day, the TV broke down, so the old lady called an engineer to repair the TV. However, shortly before the engineer came, the old lady had forgotten the appointment and went out shopping, leaving the parrot in charge.
A very few minutes later, the TV engineer rang the bell. From inside, he heard a voice calling, "Who's there?"
He replied, "The TV engineer."
Again, a voice from within, "Who's there?"
Slightly exasperated, the caller replied, "The TV engineer..." -
"Who's there?" - "THE TV ENGINEER!!" - "Who's there?" - Yelling at the top of his voice, "THE TV ENGINEER!!" - "Who's there?" (engineer has a heart attack and faints in front of the door)
A few minutes later, the old lady returns, sees the unconscious man in her front garden and exclaims, "Who's that?" - "The TV engineer, the TV engineer..." -
RE: Buescher Trumpets
@N1684T Nix. The Aristocrat instruments that I have are all top-notch.
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RE: Buescher Trumpets
@N1684T said in Buescher Trumpets:
Got my first "Aristocrat" recently, their student line
Well, from what I've seen and played, to describe their Aristocrats as "student line" is erroneous. They had a student line called "Elkhart by Buescher" - still very good instruments, but not on the same top level as the Aristocrats.
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RE: What's in your mute bag?
I always carry two bags - my gig bag, usually filled with my Buescher Aristocrat cornet, the Olds Studio and my Courtois 154R flugel and my "all else" bag with the following emergency kit: valve oil, cleaning rod, cork and slide grease, small can of WD-40, small multitool, sewing kit, spare reading glasses, music pegs, music light, spare batteries; 3-peg Hercules stand; mute holder; music stand (the big gale-safe foldable K&M). And of course the basic mute set:
H&B Symphonic Straight
DW Straight
H&B Cup
Jo-Ral cup with two different felt inlays
H&B rubber plunger
H&B Wah-wah
H&B Bucket
H&B Derby
D&W practice mute -
RE: A little humour
@Dr-Mark Pope John Paul II was notorious for his sudden decisions and irregular outings (at least, at the beginning of his pontificate). So, one day, he decided to swap places with his chauffeur one day and drive through Rome a bit - the pontiff at the wheel, the chauffeur in the screened back. Pope John Paul II had a hankering for speed so, inevitably, he runs into a speed check by Rome City Police. Obediently, he stops and rolls down the window. The policeman sees him and staggers back, at once caling HQ: "HQ, we've caught someone very high up speeding... what shall I do?" - "Arrest and enforce a fine!" - "But he's someone really very high up..." - "What do you mean, very high up. The Mayor?" - "Nnnno, no, much higher..." - "Well, then, the Prime Minister?" - "No, even much higher." - "What in the devi's name do you mean, much higher? Who is he?" - "I don't know exactly, but the Pope is His driver..."
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RE: The hammered bell
And there are still a few miniature makers that provide this finish at request.