The Oboe BBoard  
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Author: ohsuzan  
Date:   2005-09-28 20:34 
 Hi Dutchy -- 
 
Well, I don't recall ever having an Evans reed that I thought was too hard or too resistant (there may be a difference between "hardness" and "resistance" -- I think what we normally call "hard" would actually be better termed *resistant*). If anything, the problem was the opposite. 
 
Do you recall that, somewhere on this board, I wrote that in my first year or so of playing, I thought almost all reeds were "too hard" -- and then when I went to a teacher and figured out what was wrong with my embouchure, all my "too hard" reeds (many adjusted) were suddenly "too soft"? You may be travelling on that same road . . . 
 
I would definitely fool around with them for a couple of days. They will change. The first day with a new reed, I treat it rather gingerly, and don't play it very long -- just long enough to get some idea of what it sounds like and how it responds. Second day, I play a little longer, and start to pinch, etc. By the third day, I have a pretty good idea of what the ultimate character of the reed is going to be, and I might make a few adjustments (as described in my post above, in this thread).  
 
Reeds DO change over time. I continue making adjustments over the life of the reed, in many instances. A reed that was "just right" one day can seem impossible the next -- and if you have to play that day, you have to adjust the reed to where it will work at the time.  
 
I have had the experience of getting a reed that I thought was perfectly awful, tossing it unhappily into the box I reserve for such things, and then come back to it weeks or months later and find out that it is pretty good, after all. The opposite also happens -- a reed will start out great and then wimp out after a day or two. 
 
Sounds like your next investment should be a plaque and a little cutting block, and maybe a knife (although I have gone this far with nothing more than the razor blade). The plaque and block will not set you back very much -- I think about $5.00. The knife can cost as much as you want to pay. My teacher -- who is telling me I need to get one now, because I am going to start scraping reeds (from blanks, not from scratch!) -- says you can get a good knife for $20.00. I think that sounds low from what I have seen, but I will let her advise me on this. 
 
Courage!  Maybe we should talk about embouchure next? 
 
Susan
  
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Dutchy | 
2005-09-22 23:56  | 
 
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Dutchy | 
2005-09-23 00:45  | 
 
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ohsuzan | 
2005-09-23 01:56  | 
 
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Dutchy | 
2005-09-23 02:35  | 
 
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Arnoldstang | 
2005-09-23 05:14  | 
 
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sömeone | 
2005-09-23 09:03  | 
 
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Dutchy | 
2005-09-23 12:27  | 
 
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sömeone | 
2005-09-23 13:32  | 
 
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d-oboe | 
2005-09-24 21:15  | 
 
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oboist | 
2005-09-25 23:41  | 
 
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d-oboe | 
2005-09-26 17:21  | 
 
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ohsuzan | 
2005-09-23 13:41  | 
 
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winstondawg | 
2005-09-23 17:47  | 
 
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vboboe | 
2005-09-24 04:22  | 
 
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sömeone | 
2005-09-24 08:43  | 
 
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Dutchy | 
2005-09-24 13:08  | 
 
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ohsuzan | 
2005-09-24 15:14  | 
 
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Dutchy | 
2005-09-24 20:08  | 
 
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d-oboe | 
2005-09-25 21:09  | 
 
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Dutchy | 
2005-09-28 16:12  | 
 
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sylvangale | 
2005-09-28 17:26  | 
 
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oboist | 
2005-09-28 18:42  | 
 
    | 
 Re: I just bought 2 Charles Reed reeds, & the upper register won't sound. Now what?  new | 
 
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ohsuzan | 
2005-09-28 20:34  | 
 
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sylvangale | 
2005-09-29 17:20  | 
 
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Dutchy | 
2005-09-30 23:15  | 
 
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ohsuzan | 
2005-10-01 02:37  | 
 
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rgombine | 
2005-10-01 03:58  | 
 
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sömeone | 
2005-10-01 12:16  | 
 
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sylvangale | 
2005-10-04 07:25  | 
 
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sömeone | 
2005-10-04 09:26  | 
 
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Dutchy | 
2005-10-05 02:04  | 
 
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ohsuzan | 
2005-10-05 02:27  | 
 
 
  
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