Author: drdca
Date: 2010-03-03 00:21
My old age is showing, I fear: Tonalin was a material much used for a recorder-like instrument called a Fluteophone, which was popular in early grade school for some years. It had raised fingerholes (no keys) so beginners could easily feel where the hole was before moving to wood recorders.
As far as getting back on topic, :-) I still play the Brilhart Ebolin mouthpieces on Clarinet (so does my wife). I played it all through my professional career, although I used Berg Larsens on all my saxs.
Currently I believe only 3 and 5 are available in Clarinet (though I could be wrong). The presence of a * means a short lay, the absence means long (They don't make a medium length). 3 is a medium tip opening, and 5 a wide one.
Hope this helps!
Cheers, Dallas
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