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 When will a clarinet have a middle B-flat that sounds like a real note?
Author: ruben 
Date:   2025-12-28 12:56

I don't mind the middle B-flat being a little bit foggy, but there is a limit. I use the side key, adding a finger or two on the holes of the upper body of the clarinet to bring down its pitch, whenever I can. Of course, you have to have time to get to this trill key. It works well for long, held notes. Surely, a clarinet maker could come up with a solution to make this note less fuzzy.

rubengreenbergparisfrance@gmail.com


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 Re: When will a clarinet have a middle B-flat that sounds like a real note?
Author: SecondTry 
Date:   2025-12-28 19:43

Ruben:

As has come up on the bboard before, the clarinet--as I suspect you realize--is a design of many compromises.

From the positioning of the tone holes to balance the intonation of the chalumeau and clarion registers, to the positioning of the C#/G# lever by some manufacturers right on the tenon that separates the sections (at least in the 99.99% of clarinets not built in one piece) there are few better examples of compromise than in how clarinets are designed with respect to maximizing overall intonation.

No less, in an effort to make the register key serve double duty as the key that also voices the throat Bb, we face compromises. I too finger this note, when held, as you do, but can also suggest that periodic cleaning of the register pipe can help a bit with the classic fingering and even the clarion notes.

If I am not mistaken, also as discussed here, in the evolution of the instrument some manufacturers have designed actuation of the register key to open different tone holes, rather than the register key itself, if the throat A was also engaged, so as to reserve the register key's hole solely for handling the 12ths and allow a dedicated tone hole to handle the B-flat instead.

The funny thing about this though is what might happen if one were to finger the full fingered B a semitone higher, and open the throat A vent: a common technique for producing a clearer held full fingered B. I imagine, with enough work, a mechanism could be designed to open the register key rather than a dedicated B-flat one if the throat A key *and* say, either of the right pinky keys for the "B" just above it in pitch were pressed, but this gets hairy, opens the instrument up for additional places requiring maintenance and may not be worth it the player in better sound quality or cost to purchase.

I also presume you've used similar resonance fingers on the standard B-flat fingering as you (and I) do to bring down the pitch of the one made by opening the side key instead of the register key.

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 Re: When will a clarinet have a middle B-flat that sounds like a real note?
Author: David H. Kinder 
Date:   2025-12-28 21:23

My Ridenour has great sounding throat tones that are very pleasing to the ear. It doesn't 'thin' out at all.

Ridenour AureA Bb clarinet
Ridenour Homage mouthpiece
Vandoren Optimum Silver ligature (plate 1)
Vandoren Traditional #5 reeds
ATG System and Cordier Reed Trimmer

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 Re: When will a clarinet have a middle B-flat that sounds like a real note?
Author: Chris P 
Date:   2025-12-28 22:18

1010s have a decent throat Bb with the regular fingering - provided you put some air into the thing and don't just breathe from your shoulders.

Former oboe finisher
Howarth of London
1998 - 2010


Independent Woodwind Repairer
Single and Double Reed Specialist

Oboes, Clarinets and Saxes

NOT A MEMBER OF N.A.M.I.R.

The opinions I express are my own.

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 Re: When will a clarinet have a middle B-flat that sounds like a real note?
Author: SecondTry 
Date:   2025-12-29 02:07

David and Chris:

How do the B-flats on the instruments your cited compare to other notes? Are they just good as B-flats go, or do you feel that these notes hold there own on your instruments as compared to any other notes on that instrument?

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 Re: When will a clarinet have a middle B-flat that sounds like a real note?
Author: Tom H 
Date:   2025-12-29 02:29

Use A key plus 2nd from the top RH trill key for the Bb. Great tone--clear. Yes, can be hard to get to that fingering. I use it as much as possible, at times to a fault.

The Most Advanced Clarinet Book-- Sheet Music Plus item A0.1001315, Musicnotes product no. MB0000649.

Boreal Ballad for unaccompanied clarinet-Sheet Music Plus item A0.1001314.
Musicnotes product no. MNO287475

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 Re: When will a clarinet have a middle B-flat that sounds like a real note?
Author: NOLA Ken 
Date:   2025-12-29 05:43


Both my Leblanc Pete Fountain (non-enhanced Boehm) and my early Ridenour Lyrique Libertas have great, clear pinch Bbs. So it's clearly possible. But yeh, this seems to be a common issue. I use the A key + second right hand trill key a lot on my other clarinets.

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 Re: When will a clarinet have a middle B-flat that sounds like a real note?
Author: ruben 
Date:   2025-12-29 13:36

Chris P: "provided you put some air into the thing". True!! That b-flat needs to be really blown and sung to be on level with the other notes.

rubengreenbergparisfrance@gmail.com


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 Re: When will a clarinet have a middle B-flat that sounds like a real note?
Author: SecondTry 
Date:   2025-12-29 19:35

Ruben:

As I alluded to in my prior post, your concern has been addressed, albeit with limited commercial success, in offerings like the Mazzeo System reformed Boehm clarinet.

This shortened link searches this bboard for posts on this.

https://tinyurl.com/2f2vfna3



Post Edited (2025-12-29 19:37)

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 Re: When will a clarinet have a middle B-flat that sounds like a real note?
Author: Chris P 
Date:   2025-12-29 21:08

The problem with Mazzeo system is you have to play open G with all your fingers off, so any intervals involving open G and any upper register note can end up 'lumpy' as you can't put any fingers down in advance for the upper register note as you'd normally do (except the LH or RH pinkies for upper B to D#/Eb).

Leblanc's throat Bb mechanisms are either like Vito/Noblet or pro level Leblanc altos and basses and the opening of the Bb vent determined if the left thumb is off or the throat A key is held open while the speaker key is held open.

That too can cause problems with some upper register or altissimo fingerings - if the throat A key opens the Bb vent, then that'll cause trouble with the A-B trill if playing upper register B with the throat A key nudged open and trilling with RH1.

If the Bb vent is open while the left thumb is off, then that'll cause trouble with altissimo Bb (if you've got an articulated C#/G# mechanism) where you use the upper register C(5) fingering with the thumb off the thumb tube.

Former oboe finisher
Howarth of London
1998 - 2010


Independent Woodwind Repairer
Single and Double Reed Specialist

Oboes, Clarinets and Saxes

NOT A MEMBER OF N.A.M.I.R.

The opinions I express are my own.

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 Re: When will a clarinet have a middle B-flat that sounds like a real note?
Author: SecondTry 
Date:   2025-12-29 21:18

Chris P wrote:

> The problem with Mazzeo system is
>
> Leblanc's throat Bb mechanisms are either like Vito/Noblet or
> pro level Leblanc altos and basses and the opening of the Bb
> vent determined if the left thumb is off or the throat A key is
> held open while the speaker key is held open.
>
> That too can cause problems

As far as you know, did anyone implement a system that to the player involved no different fingering than on a "standard Boehm" clarinet, including, even, the ability to hold open the throat "A" key while fingering the full fingered "B" a tone above it, so as to create a better resonating "B?"

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 Re: When will a clarinet have a middle B-flat that sounds like a real note?
Author: rmk54 
Date:   2025-12-29 21:24

even, the ability to hold open the throat "A" key while fingering the full fingered "B" a tone above it, so as to create a better resonating "B?"

---------------------------------------
Yes, it's called an "index finger". There is a video of the Boston Symphony playing Brahms 4 where you can see Harold Wright using this fingering in the second movement.

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 Re: When will a clarinet have a middle B-flat that sounds like a real note?
Author: SecondTry 
Date:   2025-12-29 23:24

rmk54 wrote:

> even, the ability to hold open the throat "A" key while
> fingering the full fingered "B" a tone above it, so as to
> create a better resonating "B?"
>
> ---------------------------------------
> Yes, it's called an "index finger". There is a video of the
> Boston Symphony playing Brahms 4 where you can see Harold
> Wright using this fingering in the second movement.

The tone of this post strikes me as arrogant. The need to explain what finger opens the throat "A" key, something obvious to a clarinet player, reads to me, by analogy, as someone saying, "what's that thing they serve at McDonalds again?"...a question not even by analogy posed here, and someone snidely responding, "it's called a hamburger."

Maybe I should explain where I was going with this point as I suspect--although I could be wrong--that you may be ignorant as to why I brought it up. Here goes:

For some clarinet makers attempting to dedicate a tone hold to throat B-flat, without involving change in the player's standard fingering of same with the left index and thumb fingers, pressing the spatula commonly associated on most clarinets with solely opening the register key pipe might involve a new key designed to be "cognizant" of whether the throat "A" key was also pressed, opening this special B-flat tone hole only in those cases, but the register pipe, as is standard, in other cases.

Of course this mechanism alone might preclude playing a long full fingered "B" with the resonance fingering of opening the throat "A" tone hole, as doing so might not open the register pipe in such design, and the B-flat tone hole instead, preventing the resonance finger "B" from being realized.

It was abundantly clear from context that I do not need guidance on how this done, and for the record, whether top clarinet players have done it.



Post Edited (2025-12-29 23:28)

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 Re: When will a clarinet have a middle B-flat that sounds like a real note?
Author: paulyb 
Date:   2025-12-30 01:35

The throat Bb is definitely a problematic note - even when the tone is acceptable, the dynamic range usually leaves something to be desired. Given that the trill key fingering is usually a significant improvement, I'm surprised that manufacturers haven't tried to make it more accessible. There is an aftermarket solution from Copeland Clarinets called the Deutero but I've not heard reviews from anyone who has tried it.

If a truly automatic throat Bb vent could be created then the speaker key could be moved up / made narrower which might improve some aspects of the clarion / altissimo. But by then we're taking about a major redesign which I suspect most manufacturers would be reluctant to invest in.

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 Re: When will a clarinet have a middle B-flat that sounds like a real note?
Author: SecondTry 
Date:   2025-12-30 03:17

paulyb wrote:

> There is an
> aftermarket solution from Copeland Clarinets called the Deutero
> but I've not heard reviews from anyone who has tried it.
>


Link? I couldn’t find it a the Copeland clarinet website.

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 Re: When will a clarinet have a middle B-flat that sounds like a real note?
Author: Ed 
Date:   2025-12-30 05:25

I have always been curious- for a full boehm clarinet with a low Eb, does pressing the register key and getting the 12th provide a good Bb, or are there other acoustical issues with that?

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 Re: When will a clarinet have a middle B-flat that sounds like a real note?
Author: SecondTry 
Date:   2025-12-30 05:33

Ok, so I found it.

https://www.facebook.com/ClarinetsByCopeland/videos/first-proto-type-of-the-second-register-has-landed/2243923619384616/

For better or worse it involves its own dedicated key.

I would have loved to see something like this work with the existing register key but fully appreciate the difficult of doing so consistent with the things I mentioned prior about when the register key knows to open the register pipe verses the trill key, including not to open the trill key on a long resonating full fingered "B" with the throat "A" open.....



Post Edited (2025-12-30 05:43)

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 Re: When will a clarinet have a middle B-flat that sounds like a real note?
Author: David H. Kinder 
Date:   2025-12-30 06:55

SecondTry wrote:

> David and Chris:
>
> How do the B-flats on the instruments your cited compare to
> other notes? Are they just good as B-flats go, or do you feel
> that these notes hold there own on your instruments as compared
> to any other notes on that instrument?

The Ridenour AureA holds its own across the range. I don't feel that there's any compromises in its acoustical design.

I will (eventually) do a video of my advanced, but admittedly amateur playing and link it to another quality player who is playing on a Tosca trying out a Vandoren BD4 mouthpiece.

Her throat tones sound a bit airy or thin. I don't have that issue on my AureA and my Homage mouthpiece at all.

Her playing was good enough for Vandoren to put it on their channel, so here it is to show that even the top-line Buffet has that same throat tone quality:
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/a6hnnwahjGI

Ridenour AureA Bb clarinet
Ridenour Homage mouthpiece
Vandoren Optimum Silver ligature (plate 1)
Vandoren Traditional #5 reeds
ATG System and Cordier Reed Trimmer

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 Re: When will a clarinet have a middle B-flat that sounds like a real note?
Author: ruben 
Date:   2025-12-30 10:39

JL Clarinettes -which I, at one point worked for and has recently gone out of business (not because I worked for them!), had a vent (the tube in the bore starting at the hole in the register key) that had a slightly hour-glass shape. This seemed to help in giving the middle B-flat more clarity and making it sound like a real note.

rubengreenbergparisfrance@gmail.com


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