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    | Author: Morrigan Date:   2016-02-10 19:34
 
 Hi all,
 
 I tried my teacher's Black Diamond on his recommendation of them (he's playing on one full-time) and he said the sound I was making on it was great. I went to Howarths in London, tried a few, picked one out, despite me feeling that it's quite a buzzy, fluffy sound.
 
 So a couple of hours later I tried it out in an orchestra rehearsal in a moderately sized concert hall and I couldn't believe the sound it made! Somehow it seems to be bright and dark at the same time, a quality I really like. It had great projection and seemed to allow for heaps of control with not only dynamics but timbre as well.
 
 The two issues I have are primarily that it is FLAT! Flat to the point where both instruments are pushed all the way in, and I have to make an effort to keep the pitch up. It's much worse on the A and manageable on the Bb. Has anyone else had this? I also play on a B40 13 which has fantastic pitch.
 
 The second is that in a practice room, and in less-than-ideal acoustics, I hate the sound. It's all fluff and fuzz. BUT I can't help but think, does it matter how I sound close up? How satisfied will I be not liking my sound, but knowing that it sounds better from a distance?
 
 
 
 
 
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    | Author: Jeroen Date:   2016-02-10 19:42
 
 Your review makes me anxious to try it also!
 The projected sound is of course more important than the sound close up. How does it project in a smaller room for e.g. chamber music?
 
 
 
 
 
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    | Author: Ken Shaw ★2017 Date:   2016-02-10 19:53
 
 Intonation is more important than everything else combined. As Keith Stein said, a mouthpiece that plays out of tune is worthless, regardless of how well it may play otherwise.
 
 However, a shorter barrel might help.
 
 Ken Shaw
 
 
 
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    | Author: kdk Date:   2016-02-10 22:08
 
 Morrigan wrote:
 
 > So a couple of hours later I tried it out in an orchestra
 > rehearsal in a moderately sized concert hall ...
 >
 > The two issues I have are primarily that it is FLAT! Flat to
 > the point where both instruments are pushed all the way in, and
 > I have to make an effort to keep the pitch up.
 
 Your teacher is playing on it full time and, presumably, not having the same struggle. But he's playing on *his* instrument and barrel. So, apparently, he's found a solution, or it was never a problem to begin with on his setup. Find out what he's using with the mouthpiece.
 
 >
 > The second is that in a practice room, and in less-than-ideal
 > acoustics, I hate the sound. It's all fluff and fuzz. BUT I
 > can't help but think, does it matter how I sound close up?
 
 Well, it does, to an an extent - not so much the tone quality itself, but the response, because that affects a great many other parts of your technique. But, in conjunction with what I wrote above, you might ask your teacher what he thinks of the reeds you're playing on the mouthpiece - not the strength and brand, but the actual ones you're using every day.
 
 When I've had the reaction of not liking what was coming out in a small practice room, it generally has turned out that when I play in a bigger space the room ambiance mitigates response problems that, when I think more carefully about things, I realize are not confined to the practice room. I just don't notice them as much. You may be dealing with poorly balanced reeds or reeds that aren't quite matched to the mouthpiece that sound better in a bigger room but still aren't responding as cleanly as they might.
 
 Karl
 
 
 
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    | Author: sonicbang Date:   2016-02-11 03:56
 
 '...feeling that it's quite a buzzy, fluffy sound...'
 
 It makes me think maybe the reed strength is not appropriate.
 
 Mark
 
 
 
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