The Clarinet BBoard  
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Author: clarinetmaniac101  
Date:   2005-08-21 03:46 
 My friend was telling me that I should try out other clarinets besides the regular 4(Buffet,Yamaha,Leblanc and Selmer) and I said okay and I thought about what other clarinets there are and I said well the only thing I can think of was an Amati. I wanted to know what other clarinets are there besides those 5 I named(Buffet,Yamaha,Leblanc,Selmer and Amati) Thanks in advance for your post. I know all about the German system clarinets too. 
 
Rashad  
  *clarinet
  
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Author: BassetHorn  
Date:   2005-08-21 04:33 
 These tends to be more pricy than the big four: 
 
Orsi and Ripamonti from Italy. 
 
Steve Fox and Backun from Canada. 
 
Eaton and Hanson from the U.K. 
 
Rossi from Chile. 
 
All Boehm systems.
  
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Author: DavidBlumberg  
Date:   2005-08-21 05:04 
 Yup - Chadash Clarinet is certainly worth a try. I'd try one of those before a Yamaha or a Leblanc. 
 
  
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Author: D  
Date:   2005-08-21 09:50 
 I just got hold of a Hanson from the UK.  Seems fine to me, throat tones sound just like the rest of the clarinet - brilliant!  If you have cash to throw around then Hanson will pretty much make an instrument to your spec.
  
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Author: Chris P  
Date:   2005-08-21 11:44 
 Do any of the current makers still offer a LH forked Eb/Bb on the upper joint?
  
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Author: larryb  
Date:   2005-08-21 13:18 
 realistically, you should limit your search, if you can. 
 
the advantage of buffet, selmer, leblanc, yamaha and amati clarinets is that they're accessible and relatively affordable.  You'll drive yourself crazy if you try to sample everything, and everybody has an opinion.   
 
do yourself a favor and sit in a room with a few of each of the five popular brands, and pick the one you like best. 
 
If you're a dentist, or otherwise independently wealthy, and can travel to Europe, Canada and New York for a few weeks, then go ahead and try everything.
  
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Author: joannew  
Date:   2005-08-21 15:50 
 While you're on the European tour, don't forget Howarth in London and Patricola in Italy. 
 
  
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Author: k_leister  
Date:   2005-08-21 17:39 
 Other Boehm system: 
 
F.A Uebel 
Herbert Wurlitzer 
Leitner und Klaus 
Hyraung 
 
  They make both German system and reform-Boehm clarinets. 
 
Besides, if you wanna try out old instruments by some legendary makers, there are Oskar Oehler, Ludwig Warschewski (both Oehler system) and SML Marigaux.
  
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Author: GBK  
Date:   2005-08-21 17:52 
 If you want to try the other end of the spectrum: 
 
Laval  
Rex 
Monique  
Wexler 
Parrot 
Bestler 
Simba 
First Act 
Jinyin 
Heimer 
Maxtone 
Venus 
Grand 
Steuben 
Top Tone 
Lark 
Palatino 
Elkhart Series 
Johnson  
 
 
...GBK
  
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Author: clarinetwife  
Date:   2005-08-21 18:09 
 ARGGHHH- THE  UNMENTIONABLES!  The clarinets-that-shall-not-be-named! 
 
Maybe I need to take a suggestion from the Harry Potter books and go find a nice piece of chocolate to regain my composure. 
 
Barb
  
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Author: Don Berger  
Date:   2005-08-21 18:13 
 AND there all of the various names, and some maker names! from the 1900 to the '50/60 period, more French than others.  To try to answer Chris P 's ? re: forked Eb/Bb, it along with the artic. C#/G# is {I believe} still available on the Pete Fountain/Big Easy cls and possibly [special order?] on other Leblancs and perhaps other of the Big 4 makers. My early PF is a used Leb Dynamic 2 of the 50-60 era.  Don 
 
Thanx, Mark, Don
  
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Author: Steve Epstein  
Date:   2005-08-21 18:20 
 Nobody has mentioned Patricola, so far. Quality, modern clarinets from from Italy, priced similarly to Buffet.  
 
I'm going to copy and save GBK's list as a Word doc, so I can have a reference list whenever I run into someone who asks advice about this or that brand of clarinet they're thinking of buying for their kid. First Act gives me the creeps every time I see them at Wal-Mart. 
 
Steve Epstein
  
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Author: GBK  
Date:   2005-08-21 18:33 
 Steve Epstein wrote: 
 
 
> I'm going to copy and save GBK's list as a Word doc, so I can 
> have a reference list whenever I run into someone who asks 
> advice about this or that brand of clarinet they're thinking of 
> buying for their kid. First Act gives me the creeps every time 
> I see them at Wal-Mart. 
 
 
 
There are undoubtedly others I've left out. 
 
New ones seem to surface every late summer. 
 
Just like weeds ...GBK
  
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Author: jfvicente  
Date:   2005-08-21 18:51 
 Someone have a Rossi one? I'm about to buy one (rosewood body) but don't decided yet. 
 
Juan Francisco Vicente Becerro 
Clarinet Player / teacher 
Salamanca (Spain)
  
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Author: driftwood  
Date:   2005-08-21 19:09 
 i have something called Kohlert. i only used it about three moths before i bought one of the 'big 4' this was in...7th grade i think...five years ago. and it was really cheap, and a mistake. 
 
  
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Author: DavidBlumberg  
Date:   2005-08-21 19:29 
 Paquito D'Rivera has a Rossi. They are quite gorgeous and play really well. 
 
Congrats! 
 
  
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Author: Max S-D  
Date:   2005-08-21 22:57 
 I don't think anyone has mentioned Noblet.  Some of my saxophonist friends have picked up old Noblets for reasonable prices as doubling horns.  They play pretty well.  I still prefer a good Buffet or Selmer.
  
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Author: larryb  
Date:   2005-08-22 00:40 
 does Leblanc  still make the "Semi-rationel" clarinet? 
 
if so, you'd be half crazy not to test one.
  
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Author: javier garcia m  
Date:   2005-08-22 14:52 
 My A is a Rossi Rosewood and French Bore. Is really marvelous. You can see more information here: 
<www.rossiclarinet.cl> 
 
Some Patricola models include forked Eb/Bb as regular features. 
 
German clarinets (including reform-Boehm made by german makers) are more expensive than French ones.
  
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Author: Don Berger  
Date:   2005-08-22 15:13 
 LarryB-  I'm not sure what you mean by semi-rational cls!   At least earlier Leblanc made and advertised a series of cls with 1,2,3,4 of the additions toward toward Full Boehm key configurations. Other makers did also, at least to a degree, the simpler, lesser-expensive 17/6's dominated in sales, and player acceptance, tho.  I grew up on F B and still love them.  Don 
 
Thanx, Mark, Don
  
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Author: Lelia Loban ★2017 
Date:   2005-08-23 12:26 
 My brother's first clarinet was a Leblanc Noblet, wood, that our parents bought used, from someone whose parents bought it new in the early 1950s.  That was a good clarinet. 
 
GBK, re. the shifting names of the cheap new CSOs, now that First Act is becoming the catch-word for low end, what do you bet the company changes the name within the next year or so?  Different brand name and maybe a different color of case lining, same piece of junk.... 
 
Lelia 
http://www.scoreexchange.com/profiles/Lelia_Loban 
To hear the audio, click on the "Scorch Plug-In" box above the score.
  
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Author: GBK  
Date:   2005-08-23 13:48 
 Lelia Loban wrote: 
 
> GBK, re. the shifting names of the cheap new CSOs, now that 
> First Act is becoming the catch-word for low end, what do you 
> bet the company changes the name within the next year or so?  
> Different brand name and maybe a different color of case 
> lining, same piece of junk.... 
 
 
 
They may have already changed to "Paramount Sonatina"  
 
See: http://test.woodwind.org/clarinet/BBoard/read.html?f=1&i=190964&t=190964 ...GBK 
 
  
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Author: DavidBlumberg  
Date:   2005-08-23 13:54 
 I don't know, it has a pretty good name now, maybe it's a good instruemtnt. 
 
like I spelled it........ 
 
  
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Author: Ah Clem  
Date:   2005-08-24 01:54 
 Off topic, but I have to ask because it was mentioned above (and because I own one...)... 
 
How bad is the Simba? 
 
Ah Clem
  
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Author: GBK  
Date:   2005-08-24 02:31 
 Ah Clem wrote: 
 
> Off topic, but I have to ask because it was mentioned above 
> (and because I own one...)... 
>  
> How bad is the Simba? 
 
 
 
Pour yourself a strong one and read this thread: 
 
http://test.woodwind.org/clarinet/BBoard/read.html?f=1&i=126334&t=126323  
 
 
By the way, the last time I was in Sam's Club, I must have missed the woodwind repair department. Are they located near lawn and garden supplies?   ...GBK 
  
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Author: Ah Clem  
Date:   2005-08-24 04:01 
 GBK, 
 
Thank you for the info.  Not a problem-when I saw the price, I figured that it would be a "you get what you pay for situation" and I knew that I was not paying much.  It was $99.00 from a chain store called "Tuesday Morning". 
 
Of course, now I really don't know if the lousy sounds coming out of this thing are me or the Clarinet (I figured it was me-mostly it probably still is). 
 
Oddly enough, if it fell apart tomorrow (and from what I have now read, that is a quite likely possibility), I will still have gotten my money's worth in enjoyment.  If nothing else, it will spur me on to getting a better instrument (so now I have to figure out what that will be). 
 
Again, thank you very much for the information. 
 
It is much appreciated. 
 
Ah Clem
  
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