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 Vertigo and broken springs
Author: Bob the Composer 
Date:   2000-08-11 03:08

Earlier today, I was playing in my marching band, and noticed that some of the notes sounded really out of tune. I displayed my Clarinet to the directors, and they both said it was due to a broken spring on the middle keyhole on the section just below the barrel. As a result, E turns to E flat and the Corresponding B to B flat, and the C above that is somewhat flat too, but the rest of the notes are OK. How long would this take to fix and what should I do to fix it? Any other suggestions?

Also, I was just watching Alfred Hitchcock's Vertigo, and I noticed that in Bernard Hermann's score, the Bass Clarinet is very prominent. What are your opinions of the Bass Clarinet part?

Bob

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 RE: Vertigo and broken springs
Author: ron b. 
Date:   2000-08-11 04:21

Hi, Bob -

I've always found plain ol' rubber bands, like the newspaper kind, the best temporary remedy for a broken spring. Just stretch it around the key a couple of times (somewhere that won't interfere with the key's movement/seating) then find a friendly nearby post to sorta loop it over; in your case, probably one of the register key posts. It'll get you by 'til you get to the repair shop.

Doesn't take a repair person, with the right tool(s)/knowhow but a few minutes to replace a spring. It's not a major job.

ron b.

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 RE: Vertigo and broken springs
Author: Lelia 
Date:   2000-08-12 21:25

Repair shops buy springs in quantity and can change them in quickly -- often a while-you-wait job if the shop isn't crowded. It's not an expensive or complicated repair.

I love those Hitchcock movies and am very fond of "Vertigo"! IMHO the music sounds much better in the recently restored version. Bass clarinets have such a personality in movies -- the bass winds almost always mean that something sinister is about to happen. It's fun to listen for bass and contrabass clarinet in old "Dr. Who" episodes, too.

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