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    | Author: chapa Date:   2002-05-26 19:54
 
 I have an R 13 an the mothpiece it came with sucked...so I bought a jewel mouthpiece.  I want a new jazz mouthpiece that will let me play freely and allow me to bent my notes more like eddie daniels.
 Also Ive noticed that my clarinet is flat even when I have everything pushed in, is their anything I can do in purchasing a mpc that would halp this problem or do I HAVE to buy a shorter barrel.  Thanks everybody
 
 
 
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    | Author: wjk Date:   2002-05-26 20:25
 
 I'd try a Van Doren 5JB; I like it with Van Doren 2 1/2 reeds. Its more open than the Pomerico crystal (diamond).
 
 
 
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    | Author: super20dan Date:   2002-05-26 23:39
 
 i really like the vandoreen 5jb as well. you can bend the notes with ease . you might want to try softer reeds as the tip is very big by clarinet standards
 
 
 
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    | Author: RS Date:   2002-05-27 03:59
 
 Ralph Morgan's J (jazz) series. Very free blowing pieces.
 
 
 
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    | Author: plester102 Date:   2002-05-27 16:10
 
 I've used a Morgan J5 for years.  Blows great and the intonation is right on.  I've also tried a J7.  But, it requires a lot of chops to control.
 
 
 
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    | Author: john gibson Date:   2002-05-27 16:40
 
 Chapa...
 The Vandoren 5jb is a great jazz MPC....very open with a long facing.  It does take some getting used to though.  I also recommend
 the Pomarico Diamond crystal.  It has an open tip as well but not as big as the 5jb.  Either one will allow you to bend the notes, but the 5jb really takes a lot of control.
 Honestly Chapa...if your embouchure is good you can bend notes with any MPC.  I can even do it on cheap close tip MPCs.  Just takes practice.  The best to you....
 
 John
 
 
 
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    | Author: Donn Date:   2002-05-28 16:08
 
 Try lots of mouthpieces. Like the oldsaying goes, one man's trash................. You might try the WW K10M.
 
 
 
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    | Author: Ralph "Vintage" Morgan Date:   2002-05-31 14:01
 
 Dear Chapa;
 I noticed your quest for a good jazz clarinet mouthpiece, and, in your
 question about the perceived flat tuning of your R-13. It is seldom that
 I speak up in the chat sites, except to address a very elementary, but
 scientifically complex sublect.
 Concerning the flatness in your clarinet, when the makers 'design' and
 produce a clarinet, they may, (or more often, may not, these days) rec-
 ognize the fact that the original blueprints for a clarinet were,(or
 should have been) devised in such a way that, for the finished
 instrument to tune properly to A-440, the barrel joint furnished with
 the indtrument WOULD have to be pulled the thickness of a dime, or .055"
 to play at proper pitch. It is MOST IMPORTANT TO NOTE HERE THAT THIS
 WILL ONLY BE TRUE IF THE CCUBIC VOLUME OF AIR IN THE CHAMBER OF THE
 MOUTHPIECE IS EXACTLY THE SAME AS THAT REPRESENTED BY ONE OF THE
 'CONSTANT' NUMERICAL FIGURES IN THE EQUATIONS USED TO DETERMINE THE BORE
 SIZE, LENGTH, AND TONE HOLE SIZES AND PLACEMENTS used to produce the
 instrument.( quite a mouthfull, yes?) The fact I have stated has not
 been written about by anyone in my memory, and so the importance of it
 has very silently stolen away into the dim dark past. In measuring many
 hundreds of different makes and models of clarinet mouthpieces, I have
 yet to find one with anything near the proper cubic volume of the
 chamber, the few exceptions in history being the old mouthpieces of
 around one hundred years ago, when the chambers were of an A-shaped
 configuration. The tendency of all more modern mouthpieces, when made on
 machines, to be about 30% too small. When one looks into the chamber
 from the tip-rail end, the "window", or throat, has straight up and down
 sides, and very narrow, at that. That seems to be the only way machines
 can cut that area. The last more modern one I have seen and played was
 that one which belonged to, and was made by, Alexander Selmer himself.
 As I last knew, it belonged to Emil Shmactenburg, the late bass
 clarinetist of the Cincinnati Symphony, at whose home I had the distinct
 honor of playing it.
 So, what is the point? Well, first, please keep in mind that the bore of
 the clarinet does not begin with the top of the barrel jopint, as the
 mouthpiece makers seem to think, but at the tip rail of the mouthpiece.
 Indeed, since that is the beginning, it is also the most important and
 sensitive portion of the bore. It must have a proper cubic volume in the
 chamber, or the clarinet does not stand a ghost of a chance of playing
 in tune, with an even scale, and with even timbre and response. Do you
 recognize there any problems you may be having with your instrument? Or
 perhaps you can add the problems of a thin sounded out-of-tune throat
 Bb, or stretched twelths, or a n ever sharper altissimo, (also thinner
 sounding up there)? Well, perhaps you should look for a mouthpiece which
 has the acoustically correct chamber volume and throat configuration to
 correct those problems, instead of blaming them on the instrument.
 Mostclarinets are well designed since they are copies of copies of
 copies of the original SELMER clarinets which came into being in the
 1880,s, and were the generally used ones in the world until WWII.
 Now, the real simple WHY. Any note on the clarinet, or any other
 instrument, to be heard in tune, must be produced by a VERY FINITE CUBIC
 VOLUME OF AIR. Those various cubic volumes are measured in the
 thousandths of cubic centimeters, so small they are not visible to the
 naked eye. Do see, then, that if the volume of air in the mouthpiece is
 too little by about 30%, then the scale on the clarinet will vary
 greatly in and of itself. Of course, most players school themselves to
 'fix' their embouchures, or reeds, compensate in some way, for the
 discrepancies, but that does not remedy the cause. That is why I madethe
 decision when I retired as Chief Woodwind Designer for The SELMER
 Company 22 years ago, to be sure and remedy those discrepancies in
 mouthpieces, including those for classical and jazz, and every other
 mode. What I have put my two cents in about here is only the tip of a
 very complex but exciting science called accoustical design, but one
 which has never changed, and never will, as long as 2 plus 2 equals 4.
 Thank you for the opportunity to hopefully be of some help.
 Musically yours in Christ,
 Ralph 'Vintage'Morgan
 
 
 
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