The Doublers BBoard
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Author: mikeW
Date: 2016-03-22 20:46
You're covering a pretty wide spectrum of volume and sound, there.
I would start with the Selmer S90 190. (The chamber on the S90's is larger than on the S80's, and its almost a throwback to the old horesehoe-shaped chambers of the older Selmer mouthpieces.) If you use a harder reed, you should be able to get a dark, controlled sound that will work in a concert band or sax quartet setting. If you push it, you can crank out a fair amount of sound, and a softer reed will play somewhat brighter, so it could work for a jazz band or in a pit. Not sure about marching band. (I have a couple of these and use them in quartets. I haven't played much bari in a concert band setting for many years...)
Another mouthpiece to consider is the hard rubber Berg Larsen 110 M, or the 110 SMS, which has a somewhat shorter lay than the M. You can generate a lot of sound with one of these, so it should easily work for marching band and jazz band (I have a 110 SMS that I use with Legere reeds for big band and latin stuff.) You'd have to throttle way back to play this in a concert band setting.
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bandisepic |
2016-03-22 01:50 |
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Re: Bari Sax Mouthpiece new |
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mikeW |
2016-03-22 20:46 |
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DarkHairedIrish |
2016-04-01 19:44 |
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The Clarinet Pages
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