[TPIN] kill bill/studio tpt equipment
David Arndt
darndt at oriongate.net
Sat Apr 14 16:09:52 EDT 2007
Point taken. I suppose that is true. Many of the older Bachs I've played
(NY/Mt Vernon) do seem lighter and more responsive - at least, as memory
serves.
- da
-----Original Message-----
From: tpin-bounces at tpin.okcu.edu [mailto:tpin-bounces at tpin.okcu.edu] On
Behalf Of JFDonaldsn at aol.com
Sent: Saturday, April 14, 2007 9:27 AM
To: tpin at tpin.okcu.edu
Subject: Re: [TPIN] kill bill/studio tpt equipment
> So many great lead/commercial type
> players play Bachs, that you just can't generalized an answer. Lew
> Soloff comes to mind, for example. Here's a world class lead-player
> who plays a fairly large mouthpiece setup (old Bach 3E), and Bach
> horns - yet the 'sizzle' in his playing rivals anything you might get from
a lighter horn.
>
I'm not sure that Lew Soloff's medium bore late 40s New York Bach is all
that representative of the more than 600,000 Bach 180s made since.
I'm not arguing the point that many lead and commercial players play Bachs,
just that Soloff isn't the best example.
Jim Donaldson
The Schilke Loyalist
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