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 Fibracell Reeds
Author: Tony F 
Date:   2010-09-07 06:58

I recently decided to give Fibracell reeds a try. I've been using Legere and have tried Forestone as well. As my personal preferemce is for synthetic reeds rather than cane I felt that I needed to try all that are available in search of the perfect reed. Sadly, Fibracell isn't it. I've tried them in 2 thicknesses, medium and medium soft to bracket the 2.5 and 2.75 Legeres I normally play. I played them on several of my horns and on a wide range of mouthpieces from my collection, and for my style of playing, on my horns and on my mouthpieces, I found them to be harsh and inclined to shrillness in the upper register. I couldn't achieve the sweetness of tone that Legere and Forestone give me, and I found them to be inferior in all regards to Legere, Forestone and good cane.

Tony F.

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 Re: Fibracell Reeds
Author: dansil 
Date:   2010-09-07 13:36

Ditto!

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 Re: Fibracell Reeds
Author: Arnoldstang 
Date:   2010-09-07 21:44

Fibracell works for me.

Freelance woodwind performer

Post Edited (2010-09-08 15:34)

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 Re: Fibracell Reeds
Author: fruitbat 
Date:   2010-09-08 11:58

Shrill and harsh-my experience. No matter if carbon, classic or the original. I tried for clarinet, tenor and alto sax.

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 Re: Fibracell Reeds
Author: Arnoldstang 
Date:   2010-09-08 15:35

What's this carbon or classic?

Freelance woodwind performer

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 Re: Fibracell Reeds
Author: Bob Bernardo 
Date:   2010-09-09 01:46

The owner is located in California. After leaving Rico they contacted me, but we couldn't work out a deal as far as a partnership, or a high paid employee.

While I was there I took a few reeds amd reworked them. It made a world of difference. If you take the time to rework them they are really great for any type of playing except classical. They last a really long time. I still have a few from when I went to his business in 1998 and they actually still play.

They vibrate very well, almost sound like a cane reed, I often practice with them when I don't want to mess with finding a good cane reed. I probably have around 2500 hours on one of the reeds. They don't give as a cane reed does, so your mouth muscles will get a bit tired at first. When you switch to a cane reed, for me I love the cane sound perhaps due to the mouth muscles being built up.

Would I play these in an orchestra? No way - never never never!


Designer of - Vintage 1940 Cicero Mouthpieces and the La Vecchia mouthpieces


Yamaha Artist 2015




Post Edited (2010-09-09 01:50)

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 Re: Fibracell Reeds
Author: jacoblikesmusic 
Date:   2010-09-10 05:06

Fibracell doesn't work for me either on clarinet but it actually works okay on alto sax. It's not particularly fantastic but it works.

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 Re: Fibracell Reeds
Author: gigaday 
Date:   2010-09-10 09:30

Has anyone tried Hahn reeds?

I think that the only place that you can get them in USA is SaxAlley

http://www.saxalley.com/reeds/reeds.html?SID=h28iqos61h545s9c4gig6u55n3&reed_type=202

I like them and have no commercial interest.

Tony



Post Edited (2010-09-10 09:32)

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