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| | #21 (permalink) |
| Pianissimo User | Re: Playing Lead Thanks for all the great advice!!! I am not looking for a "lead" mouthpiece. Just one to help out with endurance and one that is more comfortable than my bach 5c. I played a 7c but switched to a 5c. I am going to consult with my new trumpet professor before I do anything. I will let you know what happens. Maybe playing those D's all day long on that 5c will be good for me and make me that much better. I don't want to damage anything though. (ps. the main reason i'm wanting to switch is because the end of my 5c is dented in like crazy and restricts my airflow. The first thing I will look at is other brands with sizes similar to a 5c.) |
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| | #22 (permalink) |
| Piano User Join Date: Dec 2003 Location: Clarksville, Tennessee, USA
Posts: 330
![]() | Re: Playing Lead I have had a 3D for many years. Bob Reeves cut the rim off my 3C and threaded it to a D cup. For me it is not any help for playing lead. It is not really very shallow at all. I have since switched to a 3B for my legit work. It has a bigger, darker sound. I too have trouble with shallow mouthpieces. I tend to "bottom out" in them. (this has been a thread on the mouthpiece forum several times) I play an Allen Vizzutti Marcinkiewicz for my lead work. It has a rim with more "bite" which seems to keep me from falling into the cup, but is fairly shallow with a tight backbore. It makes it much easier for me to play 4 hours of lead and will produce a nice, cutting sound if you push it.
__________________ "Music is a fire in your belly that has to come out of your mouth, so you'd better put a horn in the way before someone gets hurt" (paraphrase of Bleeding Gums Murphy) |
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| | #23 (permalink) |
| Pianissimo User Join Date: Feb 2007 Location: Minneapolis MN; Denton TX
Posts: 80
![]() | Re: Playing Lead I have always been a fan of Stork mouthpieces. I play a Stork 3c for legit stuff and a 3d for high range stuff/marching band etc. I have never had a problem with them, so they may be worth a look. ~PSH
__________________ "Taxes, that's your real inalienable right!" -Wynton Marsalis |
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| | #24 (permalink) |
| Pianissimo User | Re: Playing Lead I played a stork one of my teachers had laying around and I absolutely loved it! I had forgotten about them. I remember that mouthpiece feeling like "home." If felt like it should be on my lips. Plus I found their idea of "pumping up" a mouthpiece with a more funnel shaped cup interesting. |
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| | #25 (permalink) | |
| Moderator Fortissimo User Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: Home
Posts: 3,290
![]() ![]() ![]() | Re: Playing Lead Quote:
Before giving up on your 5C, however, see if you can find an old beater french horn mouthpiece, and use that as a mandrel to smooth the dented end back out. Just insert the small end of the horn mouthpiece into the end or yours, and kind of twist and push. Be careful not to enlage the tip of your mouthpiece beyond the original diameter, though. It's cheap and fun, but don't use someone's good horn mouthpiece unless you don't like them much. Good luck!
__________________ "A tool good enough to be so used and not too good" C.S. Lewis That Hideous Strength www.letsbuildhope.org | |
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| | #26 (permalink) |
| New Friend Join Date: Mar 2004 Location: NE Ohio
Posts: 17
![]() | Re: Playing Lead I had a very similar problem to yours. I ended up with a Warburton 4SV cup for the endurance problem up high and the 4D for the legit stuff. The Warburton rims have a little more "cushion" and a good bite with cups similar enough to Bach to find a good match. Go to Welcome to Kanstul Musical Instruments and click on the mouthpiece comparator link and you'll get a visual comparison that may help get you started.
__________________ Kanstul ZKT 1503s Kanstul ZKF 1525 flugel (brushed laquer) Olds "Aida" Herald Trumpet Schilke B5 Yamaha YCR 6330s Cornet Benge 90B(Large bore) Conn 34A cornet |
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