The Clarinet BBoard
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Author: Ransome Fan
Date: 2022-04-25 07:49
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I was going through my drawer of clarinet stuff, looking at mouthpieces, and I found a Leo M. Bundy mouthpiece that came with my sopranino clarinet. I’ve never tried to play it—though I should—because there is an obvious chip that I presume will make it unplayable. (I shouldn’t presume—perhaps the previous owner was a mad genius who put that chip exactly there, thereby creating the finest mouthpiece in the history of sopranino clarinets.) Anyway, I thought that I’d ask whether a mouthpiece showing this type of damage can be saved or whether it ought to be thrown in the garbage.
I also found, to my astonishment, a Dave Spiegelthal bass clarinet mouthpiece that I don’t recall having tested. I’m beginning to wonder if the tooth fairy has been leaving me mouthpieces in my drawer. I can see that I’ve got some testing to do.
I’ll see if I can add a photo of the damaged Eb mouthpiece to this post:
Post Edited (2022-04-25 08:03)
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Leo M. Bundy Eb Sopranino Mouthpiece new |
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Ransome Fan |
2022-04-25 07:49 |
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jdbassplayer |
2022-04-25 16:40 |
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Tony Pay |
2022-04-25 17:17 |
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super20dan |
2022-04-26 01:19 |
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Ed |
2022-04-26 04:09 |
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Erez Katz |
2022-04-26 05:31 |
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Ransome Fan |
2022-04-28 10:41 |
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