Aaaand, (sorry but) that's not right. Reeds match to your mouthpiece, not the strength of your muscles. If you have a more open mouthpiece, generally you use softer reeds. If you have a more close facing, your reeds will be harder strength. Just to keep things straight here :)
👍 Thanks. I know better now. before, I was taught it was based on other factors since we all used the exact same type mouthpiece. And some people moved while others didn't.
I would have loved to have plastic reeds when I was in Marching Band. They weren't around in the 80s. I always had some really bad chipped reeds for marching season. *Bass Clarinet.
you want to be careful. the legere's can play louder, but the tone is more spread, so it won't travel as far. if you want a setup that can project, use a very open mouthpiece (like Vandoren B45), then use a reed that's a little too hard for you, so that it sounds fuzzy when you play. But the fuzzy sound won't be heard 20 feet away, and you'll get a bright, clean sound.
To prove the point clarinets get features... I got a pretty cool clarinet feature when I was in high school. If you want you should check it out, because I'm screaming out an ultra sonic B :^) It's in the second movement of the video below. Cane Reed. It is a 3.5+ Rue Lepic. ruclips.net/video/mlvmUxLEdIg/видео.html
I've been using Legere reeds for about ten years. I have a couple of them that I'm still using. If you break one in that is a little stiff at first, they can last for a very long time. I've noticed that the newer signature series is thinner and doesn't seem to last as long, but I like the response better than the classic. Another thing that I've found that is helpful, is to lick the back of the reed so that it is wet when you put it on the mouthpiece. That moisture gives me a nice seal on the table of the mouthpiece. Moving the reed up or down just the tiniest bit can also make a big difference in response. Thanks for another excellent and informative video.
I always thought that the cane reeds were much better than the plastic reeds, but after seeing this video, the results were much closer than I thought. I have a Bari Saxophone Legere and a Vandoren 3 1/2 reed for my contra-alto clarinet, so I will only know for sure once I try both of them.
When I could discern a difference, I much preferred the sound of the plastic reeds. With softer playing, they had more clarity and purity of tone, and with louder playing, they got rowdy without the overly abrasive harshness (like fingernails on a chalkboard) that the cane reeds had.
BlameItOnGreg the synthetic reeds typically vibrate more uniformly and produce more of the lower partials (overtones) People often describe the resulting sound as "darker" or more "mellow"
Which Legere did you guys use? The European cut is way more flexible than the signature and I'd you haven't tried that it's way better. (they don't make it for the bass but soon they will) There is an adjustment period with legere. You have to play them with less vertical pressures and that does take months to adjust. Also moving the reed slightly up and down makes huge differences. Lastly, you have to have the right mouthpiece to use them. You have to take a reed to the store and try mouthpieces out that best suit the reed. It took me awhile to find the right combo but it was worth the effort. Now I just practicing instead of fixing reeds for the first hour or so. Traveling and weather changes are no longer a worry for me.
I was using European cut. I think my Kaspar mouthpiece is probably not the most compatible with the plastic. Trying reeds AND mouthpieces would have made a really long video! I'm going to keep messing with them because I think they could be great for teaching at school.
I have to second the idea of having a suitable mouthpiece for legere reeds. The Austrian and German mouthpiece makers I play have a specific facing of their mouthpieces especially for legere reeds. My personal issues with legere reeds have mostly been finding a match which works intonation wise. I really enjoyed the setup of this test!
How many different cuts does Legere make now? When I first tried them there was just one, but a few years ago I tried them again and there was regular cut and Quebec cut. One thing that's worth noting is that I have always needed to go down by 1/4 of a strength or even 1/2 a strength. So while I play 3.5 reeds on both clarinet and alto saxophone, when I play a Legere I need either as 3 or 3.25.
The Legere European Cut Bass Clarinet reeds are steps ahead of both the signature and classic versions. Could you please repeat the comparison with wood and perhaps the American Cut Tenor Sax reeds.
I am a returning brass player, four years now. Other than tooting on a woodwind in the seventies I know nothing about your instrument. I subscribed to your channel because I admire your skill. My day job is engineering. That said I was surprised when I picked out the wood reeds more often than not because of the pleasing sound. Kudos on your contributions to your channel.
Plastic reeds need saliva to make better contact with the mouth piece in order to cause vibration, which is what makes the sound on the clarinet or any woodwind for that matter.
have to say that, for the Bb, the plastic sounded good enough for most of what I'm likely to do with my playing. It was 95% as good as the cane but without any of the potential downsides. Be interesting to compare a plastic to some cane that's straight out the box, no selecting good cane.
I picked out the the Bb plastic legere, by slight flatness in the throat tones. I find I have pitch problems on all Legere reeds on Bb clarinet, Signatures, Euroes, and Soprano Sax. I would love to know why.
In my rather limited experience, I find a double lip embouchure problematic on Legere reeds in ways it never is with single lip. I'm primarily a single lip player, but I am comfortable with and use both.
It's not a matter of double lip: I mostly play double lip but occasionally single lip. no difference in pitch. but different reeds just tune differently, it's not a surprise. I find Steuers to be slightly sharper than the Vandorens in my opinion. probably due to the Steuers being slightly thicker than the Vandorens, and making me pinch more without realizing? For me, the Legere is actually more in tune than any other cane reed. Especially throat tones and chalumeau. Maybe you feel it's flat because it is much thinner than most cane reeds? Try curling your bottom lip more, or tighten it more. If that closes off the reed, get a Legere a quarter-strength higher, and that should solve the problem.
I've done numerous tests with mouthpieces and instruments over the years, blind tests, students and teachers both as players and listeners. Many times the listeners could not tell a difference, or guessed wrong. When they could tell a difference, they often could not say that one was "better" than the other, just different, at least with the products we were testing.
I am a "doubler", and often play in musical pit orchestras (community). For my flat reeds, I nearly always use Legere reeds because they will play right away even when cold and dry. I have been really happy with them. They are also good for teaching because you can just pick up the instrument and play. My double reeds are hand made though.
Cool video guys! I switched to Legere several years ago. I love their consistency and I can spend more of my time practicing rather than fussing with reeds!
I'm in the process of switching to Legere European Signature reeds on the Bb permanently. I've been very patient with the Legeres, going from strength 3.25 to 4.25 in quarter strength increments, and taking 1-2 weeks to try them before returning. In my experience, these reeds also have a break-in period: it take at least a week for the reeds to play how it will for the rest of it's "reed-life."Start with a reed that is slightly harder, and after the break-in, it'll soften up a bit and be perfect for you. The best strength Legere to get is the hardest strength you can play on without getting a fuzzy sound in any dynamic and range on the clarinet
Ray Zhang When I first switched to plastic, I felt the exact same way (I was on a 4.25 looking to switch to 4.5). But I noticed, with the help of my teacher, that I was just working to hard to get a sound. I was looking for the same type of resistance to blow against that cane reeds have in abundance, but instead I was getting overly resistant reeds that were mismatched to my mouthpiece. I played on and then switched to 3.75 and now I'm playing on 3.5-3.25. Once I stopped biting the reed the sound was so full and easy to produce, it wad kinda scary. Anyway, that's just my 2¢.
you can return the Legeres that you buy from Amazon. I've done it countless times. Yes you won't get 2-day shipping, but I could care less since money is more important to me.
Warning, long winded comment! I think the main thing holding people back from Légère is that there is no good way to try a selection. People might agree to buy one Reed, but if it doesn't work with what they have currently they stop trying. Legere is different from cane, it would make sense to try different versions and different mouthpieces until you find something that works and give it a run. I used to hate Légère in high school and thought they were completely unplayable. But when I got to college I was shocked to see my professor switch to one angrily during a particularly bad weather/reed day. He doesn't play on them normally, but if his cane won't cooperate he moves to something that will. (Until he can adjust or break in something new) After trying out what his combination was I decided to switch and give Légère a chance. I found that I was able to get around 85-90% of the same results from Légère, cold, no break in, no adjustment period. As a music Ed major I don't have time to be babying cane reeds and keeping up constant new rotations. Legere let's me perform and practice with out any of the complaints associated with reeds. Which is a phenomenal achievement (seriously pay attention to how much people complain about reeds). For the other instruments I've still to find a good combination. On bass they "work" but like you Michael I'm not sold on them. I probably just need to try more mouthpieces. For eb I sound terrible so anything Légère will follow lol. However on contra they are a REQUIREMENT. I've seen die hard vandoren/cane players switch to Légère when assigned contra. Cane reeds will close up and warp every time on a reed of that size. If you're still reading this comment, thanks! I'll get off my soapbox now and feel free to ask any questions!
You mentioned that there is no good way to try a selection. I just wanted to say you can return Legeres that you buy from Amazon. I've done it countless times, and now I have awesome Legeres to use. You'd be surprised at how much the reeds can vary, even though they are synthetic. If you live near LA, I think RDG woodwinds allows you to try a few Legeres and pick the ones you want -- I think.
Hazel D all reeds have the potential to chip, but legere are much stronger than cane reeds. Of all the plastic reeds I've used I think I've only chipped one (and that one was pretty old). As long as you're not too rough with it it won't chip.
Hi Michael! Good job here! I'm a good, old friend of John Moses and was there when he started down the Legere path. It takes awhile to get used to them, but once he did, I could not tell that John was playing a synthetic reed. At first I could tell right away, then he got the articulation sorted out, and then he found the sound, more reed like. So, if this was pretty much the first time you guys were trying Legeres, then I think they held up very well against cane reeds, and with some continued playing, you could probably get the same results. Or close to it. As a lowly, untrained doubler on Broadway, they have saved my a** many times at WICKED, especially on bass clarinet. I also use them on clarinet and bari sax. It might be sacrilegious, but I use a Signature Tenor Sax Legere on bass, just seems to make more noise as is required on Broadway. Give them a try! Best, Harry
I'm a bass trombonist, and I could tell MUCH better than random guessing on the Soprano Clarinet side. For the bass clarinet, it was only really obvious for me on the Rite of Spring solo, but for that one in particular, it was clear as day which was which. I think on bass clarinet, you could probably get away with the plastic reeds most of the time, perhaps only switching to cane for particular repertoire. For soprano- no way, play wood or the audience is going to know.
Reeds are a very personal thing, what they think of those reeds might be completely different to others. Personally I run legere signature 3.5 on clarinet and 3.25 on bass clarinet. However I do hop between legere and vandoren v12 3.5 for both bass clarinet and clarinet. In the end i do prefer the legere reeds just because they work for me. And here in Canada where it's a heat storm one day and a snow storm the next (and my inability to work on reeds) my cane reeds don't always make the sound I want where the legere reeds will work in any condition.
Absolutely! Like I've said to a few other commenters, this is all a very personal thing. I'm not telling anyone to change what they use, nor am I saying "I'm right." - Just giving my 2¢ as usual.
I use Legere exclusively , but on saxes. One has to warm them up for 2-3 minutes. One should also find mouthpieces that play well with Legere. On sax there are 3 models of Legere reeds. I have this problem solved and go to my gigs totally confident in my reed situation. WHAT A RELIEF!!!! If I play long gigs, i will rotate reeds. I use a system to see how many gigs i have played on each reed. For me , the Legere on tenor can split on the tip if i´m really working extreme altissimo- into the 5th octave. I will practice that kind of thing on reeds that are past their prime. Throw out all preconceptions and really explore the possibilities!
I play clarinet and use 3 1/2 reeds as well and I have both a plastic red and wooden reeds, but I have to say that wooden reeds, in my opinion, give off a better sound and feel better as far as vibration. When I play my plastic reed, I feel like I have to push a lot more air out. Awesome experiment!!! I was intrigued!!!!!!!
I'd be curious to see you try some of the different synthetic reeds with different mouthpieces. Just a comparison between synthetic. I definitely don't like all of them. Some are a bit stuffy to me, but I found the legere American cut works really well with my jazz alto setup. Also you might need a lower strength to have a similar feel.
Exactly! I play alto sax but I'm an oboe player first. I chipped the corner of my alto reed and it played just fine, but I did the same to my oboe reed a month ago and it didn't play! Single reed peeps will never understand.
I basically play every single woodwind instrument and the instruments that have the least struggles is the flutes. Also I play alto for marching band, my reed gets banged up all the time and it still plays fine. But my oboe reed on the other hand :/. My oboe fell on the floor and chipped the corner of it, then right after that, someone stepped on the reed by accident. I was dead on the inside.
As a self-taught beginner, I’m finding the Legere “European cut” 3.0 strength on a Yamaha 4C works well enough for me. The thing I hear about plastic reeds is that they’re supposed to be good for slap tonguing.
I´m sorry guys , but on the playbacks, the plastic reeds sounded more even and bigger and warmer. It is all very subjective, and I think you should work a little more with the plastic and keep in mind my earlier suggestions. You still have to work at it to to get what you want.
Michael is a Vandoren artist so it's likely he'll stay Vandoren. if he spent more time trying Legeres (and worst case situation switching a mouthpiece), he could probably end up with a Legere setup he likes. but it's unlikely he'll do that
must be subjective. I thought the plastic reeds were missing a comparative ton of resonance, sounding thin and flat especially on the slower etude. I imagine the quality of one's playback system might have an effect too.
No way. The cane reeds had such a depth that I could tell was missing from the plastic reeds instantly. The plastic reeds do sound smoother but it makes it sound artificial. Like digital vs traditional art. One just has the extra touch to it that gives it a special richness.
I have the same issue with the oboe reeds. They have no lower partials and so they sound thin and waxy. Much better than the opd fiber cane plastic reeds, but still not something i can play on in concert
Légère user here. I use European Cut 3 with a Vandoren 5JB for my Bb clarinet (used to play the Signature cut before that), and a saxophone Signature 2,5 with a Brilhart "made for Buescher" on my Buescher Alto clarinet (yes, saxophone reed... no alto Signature no more in the catalog... but works very well). What I like in those reeds : free blowing, help me to feel comfortable and express myself, they are sturdy, long last, I like the feeling on the tongue more than a cane reed. It's a part of me and my sound when I play clarinet. I understand it's a choice, but that's how I feel.
I still prefer cane reeds. I use the Ridenour method to prepare them and have found that each reed has it's own pros and cons but i can tweak them for maximum performance. They also have a more flexible dynamic range which adds more emotion. Thanks for the demo. Rik spector
I had a similar reaction when trying one on bass clarinet, but after hearing how well Katherine sounded on Bb soprano I'm interested in trying one on that instrument.
I'm perfectly happy playing my clarinet with Vandoren 2.5 reeds as they make a very mellow sound. I don't think that I would want to change to plastic ones as they have a harsh sound that I don't like. Thank you very much for this very informative video you both. Very helpful and enjoyable to watch. I will be getting my clarinet out again this week. Can you do a video on preventing squeaks? I have a consistent problem, which I think is caused by my fingers not covering holes properly, but it might be something else. Also I often find that the note B often doesn't speak, it's very temperamental and annoying!! Thank you both very much and have a lovely day.
Thank goodness for the invention of plastic reeds cause I broke like 7 wooden reeds in one month during marching season (then I ended up splitting the plastic reed during rehearsal)
The thing with the Legeres is they just always work. I have friends who play them because it gives them confidence they can’t always be sure of with cane, and confidence in the tools is obviously a big deal (I actually wonder if this is why professionals seem to be switching - the very high consistency and reliability is just more valuable than a slight tone quality loss?). I have two Legeres in my case for when the environment is weird (usually outside) and nothing else is working, or when my best cane reeds are already waterlogged from playing all day, or whatever. I was nonetheless surprised by the fact that I could ID the cane almost all the time (I got all the Bb tests, almost all the bass) just because the sound slightly lacked the richness and roundness of cane, at least as recorded and on my headphones. They’re getting really close, but for me they aren’t quite there yet and I’ll live with my V21s and associated hassles and wait for the next version of the synthetics.
The plastic reeds have a smooth, almost blank feel to them. It's like, where is the wood in the woodwind? I much prefer the more organic, resonant tone of the cane reeds. Many years ago, I got to be the guinea pig trying out a plastic reed on the bassoon. it definitely felt different in the mouth, and was not giving the range of tone I was accustomed to. I stuck with the cane, even though the plastic was cheaper. Sometimes cheaper is not worth it.
Conclusion: organic vs synthetic, analogue vs digital. Both are different, but not significantly so. Whether or not one is better is a matter of taste.
Great video. I’m a legere signature series fan as I hate having those bad reed days. As always there will be a slight compromise if you choose either cane or plastic. Thanks for this video The legere reeds as they warm after let’s say 30 mins of playing get softer which for me makes it more dynamic. Xx
Honestly I now use a legere EUROPEAN CUT (the other ones are trash) strength 4.5 permanently and I'm never going back to wood they're consistent and sound great. TIP: If you want to make them last longer, rinse off the back of the reed after every time you play on it to prevent spit from drying in the cracks, I've been doing this and I've been playing on the same plastic reed for five months and it still sounds great
You two should recut this vid after getting used to the Legeres. Once you get your embouchure used to the smaller adjustments that plastic/nylon requires, you might be quite surprised at how much more consistent the Legeres are from reed to reed. Just sitting down with any new reed cut - even bamboo, takes some getting used to. Also, try going down 1/2 stiffness. Disclamer - I also play Van Doren on my Yamaha (4) and Buffet Crampon (3.5).
I gave those plastic reeds a good test over some time. The thing that I hated was the "buzz" sensation on the lips. The sound, nothing I could put my finger on, but preferred the cane.
My friend uses the legere contrabass reed and he loves it, im more of a fibracell or bari guy myself. Love the way they sound with my high schools selmer bass clarinet
Thank you for great vids. In regards to the synthetic reeds, it is important to note that though they aren't better than cane, they are great for doublers and those of us who live in dry climates. I'm in Santa Fe, NM.
I just bought a Leger reed (currently in the mail somewhere) and am hoping it may be helpful for those scorching day, outside, summer community band concerts where keeping a reed wet is almost impossible.
Even though they might not quite play as well, the strong point of plastic reeds is their consistency from day-to-day since they aren't influenced by weather, so you don't waste time and money and stress finding a good reed. Sometimes that is more important.
I’m not a fan of the Legere reeds at all. I was running into the same issues you described with your bass clarinet- but I experienced those problems on both my soprano and bass clarinets. I’m a purist with my Vandoren reeds (I use V-12s). However, a friend of mine suggested I try Silverstein Works reeds. I like them (so far) in past two months I’ve used them. I noticed they have a synthetic reed called Alta Ambipoly, and they claim to be a synthetic reed that sounds like a cane reed. They only have this reed available for Bb soprano clarinet, but I actually like it! I have two of them right now and they have a surprisingly bright and resonant sound! I use them for gigs when I am playing more “pop-ish” stuff that requires me to play a little brighter. I’m still a purist when playing concert band or orchestra literature though, and I’ll keep playing my cane reeds there. Have you tried Silverstein Works yet? I’m curious to know your thoughts.
i would like to ask, if any of you has experienced this problem, I used to play bass clarinet with legere signature reeds, and after a little while of using it, I notice that some cracks appears, they didn´t go all the way trough but nearly! ¿anyone has experienced this problem?
cesar hashmi manfredi i had this problem last year when i played alto in marching season. My reed would have a crack going down the reed within the first week even though i felt like i never bit down to hard.
I'm new to the Bass Clarinet. I have the easiest time with Harry Hartmann's (Fiberreed) Hemp Tenor Sax reeds on my BC (Kessler Model 2 low C BC), using either Yamaha BD5 or Selmer Focus MPC. Have you tried Fiberreeds on your BC?
I tested the Fibercane Oboe Reed for 25 years. The manufacturer neglected the upkeep of the tooling which was extremely complicated and labor-intensive. Wholesaled to Selmer, in Elkhart Indiana and they distributed these reeds all over the United States. and parts of Europe.The schools don’t invest in oboe players anymore. I still make professional oboe reeds. They were actually very excellent reeds for beginning oboists, since they played consistently. I had my first one in 1966 or 1967 at 11 or 12 years old. Some plastic reeds have their merits.
Where have you guys been living? Under a trumpet player's case? I was using nylon reeds in 1976. Solved the biggest predicament for a marching band clarinetist - good clarion registry response while maintaining great lows - no squeaks at high knee 8 to 5!
Can you review the Fibre Cell reeds against both the Cane Reed and the Legere Reed. I use synthetic reeds due to a cane allergy, but much prefer the Fibre Cell.
I played alto saxophone for 4 years and I've found that vandoren was the best for me. I liked it because it made my sax sound clearer than the reeds my band teacher provided.
My teacher uses 2.5 legeres with the rovner dark ligature on a Premiere mouthpiece by HITE. He said his last read played for two years while doing 1.5 hour shows for a circus plus teaching and stuff. I happened to have the same set-up for tenor (then also bought it for alto) and it works great at my level as well. They are very consistent, and the benefit of not having to mess with reeds is a huge set of benefits. You have to clean off the reed of build-up more like a mouthpiece though, but that's low maintenance by comparison to cane.
I use Legere reeds exclusively now. While its clear that a really good cane reed is better, not having to practice the ritual around maintaining current and grooming new reeds allows me to spend a little more time practicing. Plus, on concert day I never worry about chipping my favorite reed because the Legere is always ready to go. Having said all that, if there was a situation where I needed to produce my best sound with the clearest articulation I would use a cane reed and pray.
It would have been interesting to have one of you do one round where you ONLY played cane or ONLY played plastic to see whether the listener had a bias on expecting a difference. Like the control group in a double blind study. Interesting video.
Which Legere reeds were these? Legere make two series of professional clarinet reeds, Signature and Classic, and the Signature series has an alternative variation called European signature.
Is there any clarinetist that can help? My clarinet sounds wonky when it plays high B or C. They sound the same! It has never happened before, and I have always been able to play those notes. If you know how to fix it, or can give me any advice, please reply to this comment!
maybe one of your "springs" came loose. This happened to me 2 years ago when one of the small metal bars unclicked so when i played open g it would sound like f sharp. just check if all the small metal bar things are clicked. sorry it's kinda hard to explain.
Hey Michael, I experienced the same thing you demonstrated with Legere bass clarinet reeds, both the Signature and Classic. Try a tenor sax STUDIO CUT. Solved most of the issues, for me anyway. It's still not a cane reed, but the slight differences are not worth it to me to monkey around with cane reeds anymore. Thanks for the video!
I like Legeres, except . . . on bass clarinet, where I just don't like the sound. For soprano clarinet, the European cut is much better and to me seems like it would usally be about the 2nd-3rd best reed in a box of cane, certainly good enough for rehearsals and, often, concerts. On thing that hasn't been mentioned is that Legeres are an absolute Godsend for pit work. I like the sound of Legeres on sax, but more importantly, you often need to pick up a horn that has been sitting for 20++ minutes and come in on an exposed part - with a Legere, you know it's going to work. This past summer, I had 6 horns in a pit and used Legeres on 5 of them (including bass clarinet, really no alternative).
Thanks for the great video...some of them were hard to guess correctly. I have done a similar comparison on my Soprano and Alto Sax of Legere and Vandoren reeds. I have found that their comparison chart is a little off. If I play on a Vandoren 3 they say I should use 3.25 of 3.5. I think that a 3.0 Legere is a better comparison. Maybe try with adjusting down and see if you get the responsiveness and power you are looking for.
I'll need to purchase the plastic clarinet reeds, but I'm different. For Soprano clarinet, I use D'addario Reserve Classic 3.5+ reeds and for Bass, Contra, Tenor Sax, and Bari Sax, I use plastic reeds.
My band director in high school always warned about plastic reeds "messing up" your articulation. I used a plastic reed on the contra-alto all year my senior year and I don't think that was necessarily true, but this video definitely shows the minutiae between plastic and cane reeds, and where they may be better for different situations. I use a 5RV and 3.5 V21s in both concert and marching settings because I care about my tone. Some of my friends in my marching section use plastic reeds and they really don't make that much of a difference on the field, but after watching this video and knowing what I already know, I am still not going to recommend plastic reeds for concert settings unless there are extenuating circumstances, maybe for larger instruments and money is an issue.
My take: Legere reeds can and should be worked on as wooden reeds in terms of sanding and filing( of course not on the vamp, just the top). Huge improvement. Buy slightly hard, then customize. Legere reeds are good for doubling situations in that they always respond the way you can predict. They work on clarinet better than sax in my experience. They're good for just leaving on the horn and picking up for a quick practice interlude. They're great for students who don't know how to care for wood reeds. They can make you really appreciate a good wood reed, but you can get used to them and not miss wood.
Great test. I personally didn't hear much of a difference between cane and plastic. I have been using Legere for about three years and much prefer them to cane. No messing with cane to balance it etc. Put it on and play, no need to wet the reed. They last a long time. I agree, you need to match the reed with an appropriate mouthpiece. Thanks for the video.
I made the full switch to Legere Euro cut Signatures on Bb, but that's because I just so happened to own a few mouthpieces that were quite compatible with them. I have yet to switch to the Legere Signatures on bass or on my saxes because quite frankly they don't sound that great on my mouthpieces and unlike with the soprano clarinet, I'm not as willing to go out and find the right mouthpiece for the Legere on my other instruments. I don't think Legere reeds are at the point where they could completely replace cane. If they just so happen to work on your setup or you're willing to go out of your way to spend $200-$400 searching for a new mouthpiece setup, make the switch! I'm super happy with mine and am at the point where I'm taking them to major performances and auditions. If they don't work for you, no problem! Use what sounds best and feels best to you.
I need Reed help. I haven't played a woodwind in a couple years because of the instrumentation my band needed. Now my cane reeds go soft and become unplayable after less than three hours of use. I got a plastic Reed but it takes so so so much more air and gives me a headache and my jaw hurts after 10 minutes of use. What can I do to make my cane reeds last longer or make my plastic one hurt less?
I have a few of these reeds for my bassclarinet just to try them but only used them in case of emergency.I also have Fibracell composite reeds which i am very curious to compare these with the legere and cane reeds.I hope that you want to do a same comparison with fibracell reeds
I tried out plastic reeds for a little while about a year and a half ago and found I like cane better as well. I was playing in marching band and orchestra and found that, yeah the plastic reeds lasted through the marching abuse but didn’t give me the volume I needed for that setting. I switched back to cane permanently when I actually cracked my plastic reed, which is tough to do!
Just going through a carton of cane and inspecting them for suitability is reason enough to choose the more uniform synthetic. So a move towards uniformity at all times is a plus in my book. Tone? In solo work, perhaps cane. But synthetic is so... set and forget. I can't help but prefer synthetic reeds in the great majority of circumstances.
Plastic reeds do not have that BARK
I'm sure the pun was unintentional
OMFG BRO THAT HAD ME ON THE FLOOR
imitatsiya I i
I was JUST thinkin that lol
imitatsiya I was about to comment about that.
.......🤣😂😃😄😅
“And I use a 2.5 cuz I’m like a 5th grader”
Honey Darling Sugar Bumkin Sweetheart I was just quoting what he said lol
Aaaand, (sorry but) that's not right. Reeds match to your mouthpiece, not the strength of your muscles. If you have a more open mouthpiece, generally you use softer reeds. If you have a more close facing, your reeds will be harder strength. Just to keep things straight here :)
👍 Thanks. I know better now. before, I was taught it was based on other factors since we all used the exact same type mouthpiece. And some people moved while others didn't.
Erick Martinez it would be different if a person uses 2.5 reed with a tip opening of 8 or 9 haha
Erick Martinez 3.5 is the bets for high notes
I only use plastic reeds during marching season so they won’t get dry when it’s really cold out.
During concert season I go back to my wooden reeds
I would have loved to have plastic reeds when I was in Marching Band. They weren't around in the 80s. I always had some really bad chipped reeds for marching season. *Bass Clarinet.
Not to mention warping
I only knew of plasticoat reeds when I was in marching band, that was 1990-1994.
I'm in the same camp with you Nicole, Plastic for marching and cane reed for me during concert season.
All the clarinets and saxaphones in my band never use plastic reeds, even playing outside. Of course I live in Alaska, so we learn to deal with it.
honestly besides the volume thing, plastic reeds seem perfect for marching band (but it's not like anyone can hear the clarinets anyway)
you want to be careful. the legere's can play louder, but the tone is more spread, so it won't travel as far. if you want a setup that can project, use a very open mouthpiece (like Vandoren B45), then use a reed that's a little too hard for you, so that it sounds fuzzy when you play. But the fuzzy sound won't be heard 20 feet away, and you'll get a bright, clean sound.
Many marching bands have woodwind features now in their shows. Clarinets better be able to be heard!
Bs that’s not true
What's not true?
To prove the point clarinets get features...
I got a pretty cool clarinet feature when I was in high school. If you want you should check it out, because I'm screaming out an ultra sonic B :^)
It's in the second movement of the video below. Cane Reed. It is a 3.5+ Rue Lepic.
ruclips.net/video/mlvmUxLEdIg/видео.html
Ima trumpet player...
Why am I here?!
Trevor Cannon ....to show the other trumpet players where they are going wrong...then become a conductor😆
I'm a guitar player...
...why am I here?
Ok, my daughter plays Clarinet.
Trevor Cannon I’m a flute. I’m. Strong independent wooden who don’t need no reed.
I’m a trombone player...
Why am I HERE?
Im a trombone and flute player
I've been using Legere reeds for about ten years. I have a couple of them that I'm still using. If you break one in that is a little stiff at first, they can last for a very long time. I've noticed that the newer signature series is thinner and doesn't seem to last as long, but I like the response better than the classic. Another thing that I've found that is helpful, is to lick the back of the reed so that it is wet when you put it on the mouthpiece. That moisture gives me a nice seal on the table of the mouthpiece. Moving the reed up or down just the tiniest bit can also make a big difference in response. Thanks for another excellent and informative video.
I think the shirts are the best part. Where can I get one?
I always thought that the cane reeds were much better than the plastic reeds, but after seeing this video, the results were much closer than I thought. I have a Bari Saxophone Legere and a Vandoren 3 1/2 reed for my contra-alto clarinet, so I will only know for sure once I try both of them.
All plastic reeds used to be crap. It's not many years that synthetic has been a real option.
When I could discern a difference, I much preferred the sound of the plastic reeds. With softer playing, they had more clarity and purity of tone, and with louder playing, they got rowdy without the overly abrasive harshness (like fingernails on a chalkboard) that the cane reeds had.
BlameItOnGreg the synthetic reeds typically vibrate more uniformly and produce more of the lower partials (overtones)
People often describe the resulting sound as "darker" or more "mellow"
Some might argue and say that your "purity of tone" sounds artificial and sterile since those subtle nuance is what brings music to life.
I love you, i love your brutal honesty, about yourself, about people, about anything...
I particularly enjoy any videos that you do jointly with Katherine; the back and forth is very helpful.
Which Legere did you guys use? The European cut is way more flexible than the signature and I'd you haven't tried that it's way better. (they don't make it for the bass but soon they will) There is an adjustment period with legere. You have to play them with less vertical pressures and that does take months to adjust. Also moving the reed slightly up and down makes huge differences. Lastly, you have to have the right mouthpiece to use them. You have to take a reed to the store and try mouthpieces out that best suit the reed. It took me awhile to find the right combo but it was worth the effort. Now I just practicing instead of fixing reeds for the first hour or so. Traveling and weather changes are no longer a worry for me.
I was using European cut. I think my Kaspar mouthpiece is probably not the most compatible with the plastic. Trying reeds AND mouthpieces would have made a really long video! I'm going to keep messing with them because I think they could be great for teaching at school.
I have to second the idea of having a suitable mouthpiece for legere reeds. The Austrian and German mouthpiece makers I play have a specific facing of their mouthpieces especially for legere reeds. My personal issues with legere reeds have mostly been finding a match which works intonation wise.
I really enjoyed the setup of this test!
Was it the European signature cut?
How many different cuts does Legere make now? When I first tried them there was just one, but a few years ago I tried them again and there was regular cut and Quebec cut.
One thing that's worth noting is that I have always needed to go down by 1/4 of a strength or even 1/2 a strength. So while I play 3.5 reeds on both clarinet and alto saxophone, when I play a Legere I need either as 3 or 3.25.
for clarinet: Legere classic, Legere signature, and Legere european signature.
for sax: Legere classic, Legere studio cut, and Legere signature
I like how he blurred her wetting the reed so you couldn't see it was cane... lol
Thanks for the very informative video! This was burning a hole in my mind, and now I know what to choose!
The Legere European Cut Bass Clarinet reeds are steps ahead of both the signature and classic versions. Could you please repeat the comparison with wood and perhaps the American Cut Tenor Sax reeds.
I am a returning brass player, four years now. Other than tooting on a woodwind in the seventies I know nothing about your instrument. I subscribed to your channel because I admire your skill. My day job is engineering.
That said I was surprised when I picked out the wood reeds more often than not because of the pleasing sound. Kudos on your contributions to your channel.
5:58 You see her put the reed in her mouth, therefore it is cane.
Jared Ho I literally thought the same thing😂
Plastic reeds need saliva to make better contact with the mouth piece in order to cause vibration, which is what makes the sound on the clarinet or any woodwind for that matter.
have to say that, for the Bb, the plastic sounded good enough for most of what I'm likely to do with my playing. It was 95% as good as the cane but without any of the potential downsides. Be interesting to compare a plastic to some cane that's straight out the box, no selecting good cane.
The tune they played for articulation is the same piece I played for my bass clarinet auditions
I picked out the the Bb plastic legere, by slight flatness in the throat tones. I find I have pitch problems on all Legere reeds on Bb clarinet, Signatures, Euroes, and Soprano Sax. I would love to know why.
In my rather limited experience, I find a double lip embouchure problematic on Legere reeds in ways it never is with single lip. I'm primarily a single lip player, but I am comfortable with and use both.
It's not a matter of double lip: I mostly play double lip but occasionally single lip. no difference in pitch. but different reeds just tune differently, it's not a surprise. I find Steuers to be slightly sharper than the Vandorens in my opinion. probably due to the Steuers being slightly thicker than the Vandorens, and making me pinch more without realizing?
For me, the Legere is actually more in tune than any other cane reed. Especially throat tones and chalumeau. Maybe you feel it's flat because it is much thinner than most cane reeds? Try curling your bottom lip more, or tighten it more. If that closes off the reed, get a Legere a quarter-strength higher, and that should solve the problem.
I've done numerous tests with mouthpieces and instruments over the years, blind tests, students and teachers both as players and listeners. Many times the listeners could not tell a difference, or guessed wrong. When they could tell a difference, they often could not say that one was "better" than the other, just different, at least with the products we were testing.
I had one for my alto sax and I loved it for the most part. I liked that it was reliable and always played the same
I am a "doubler", and often play in musical pit orchestras (community). For my flat reeds, I nearly always use Legere reeds because they will play right away even when cold and dry. I have been really happy with them. They are also good for teaching because you can just pick up the instrument and play. My double reeds are hand made though.
dou deserve way more abonnements. every clarinetist searching for helps on the internet is bound to come to you sooner or later
Cool video guys! I switched to Legere several years ago. I love their consistency and I can spend more of my time practicing rather than fussing with reeds!
I'm in the process of switching to Legere European Signature reeds on the Bb permanently. I've been very patient with the Legeres, going from strength 3.25 to 4.25 in quarter strength increments, and taking 1-2 weeks to try them before returning. In my experience, these reeds also have a break-in period: it take at least a week for the reeds to play how it will for the rest of it's "reed-life."Start with a reed that is slightly harder, and after the break-in, it'll soften up a bit and be perfect for you. The best strength Legere to get is the hardest strength you can play on without getting a fuzzy sound in any dynamic and range on the clarinet
Ray Zhang When I first switched to plastic, I felt the exact same way (I was on a 4.25 looking to switch to 4.5). But I noticed, with the help of my teacher, that I was just working to hard to get a sound. I was looking for the same type of resistance to blow against that cane reeds have in abundance, but instead I was getting overly resistant reeds that were mismatched to my mouthpiece. I played on and then switched to 3.75 and now I'm playing on 3.5-3.25. Once I stopped biting the reed the sound was so full and easy to produce, it wad kinda scary. Anyway, that's just my 2¢.
Ray Zhang where do you buy reeds that you can return?
you can return the Legeres that you buy from Amazon. I've done it countless times. Yes you won't get 2-day shipping, but I could care less since money is more important to me.
Ray Zhang do you get a full refund?
yes you do!
You two are great. Enjoying your videos.
Warning, long winded comment!
I think the main thing holding people back from Légère is that there is no good way to try a selection. People might agree to buy one Reed, but if it doesn't work with what they have currently they stop trying. Legere is different from cane, it would make sense to try different versions and different mouthpieces until you find something that works and give it a run.
I used to hate Légère in high school and thought they were completely unplayable. But when I got to college I was shocked to see my professor switch to one angrily during a particularly bad weather/reed day. He doesn't play on them normally, but if his cane won't cooperate he moves to something that will. (Until he can adjust or break in something new)
After trying out what his combination was I decided to switch and give Légère a chance. I found that I was able to get around 85-90% of the same results from Légère, cold, no break in, no adjustment period. As a music Ed major I don't have time to be babying cane reeds and keeping up constant new rotations. Legere let's me perform and practice with out any of the complaints associated with reeds. Which is a phenomenal achievement (seriously pay attention to how much people complain about reeds).
For the other instruments I've still to find a good combination. On bass they "work" but like you Michael I'm not sold on them. I probably just need to try more mouthpieces. For eb I sound terrible so anything Légère will follow lol. However on contra they are a REQUIREMENT. I've seen die hard vandoren/cane players switch to Légère when assigned contra. Cane reeds will close up and warp every time on a reed of that size.
If you're still reading this comment, thanks! I'll get off my soapbox now and feel free to ask any questions!
You mentioned that there is no good way to try a selection. I just wanted to say you can return Legeres that you buy from Amazon. I've done it countless times, and now I have awesome Legeres to use. You'd be surprised at how much the reeds can vary, even though they are synthetic.
If you live near LA, I think RDG woodwinds allows you to try a few Legeres and pick the ones you want -- I think.
This is probably a dumb question but do the plastic reeds chip? Bc if not I’d be willing to try them.
Hazel D all reeds have the potential to chip, but legere are much stronger than cane reeds. Of all the plastic reeds I've used I think I've only chipped one (and that one was pretty old).
As long as you're not too rough with it it won't chip.
I've got a few Legeres and haven't chipped any yet
Geronimo thank you!
Your shirts are my MOOD 😂 I play Bb clarinet and bass clarinet 😂
Thank you.PLEASE,more videos about plastic reeds or other analogues to cane:)
Hi Michael! Good job here! I'm a good, old friend of John Moses and was there when he started down the Legere path. It takes awhile to get used to them, but once he did, I could not tell that John was playing a synthetic reed. At first I could tell right away, then he got the articulation sorted out, and then he found the sound, more reed like. So, if this was pretty much the first time you guys were trying Legeres, then I think they held up very well against cane reeds, and with some continued playing, you could probably get the same results. Or close to it. As a lowly, untrained doubler on Broadway, they have saved my a** many times at WICKED, especially on bass clarinet. I also use them on clarinet and bari sax. It might be sacrilegious, but I use a Signature Tenor Sax Legere on bass, just seems to make more noise as is required on Broadway. Give them a try! Best, Harry
6:16 whats the name of this piece??
rose etude 4.
I'm a bass trombonist, and I could tell MUCH better than random guessing on the Soprano Clarinet side. For the bass clarinet, it was only really obvious for me on the Rite of Spring solo, but for that one in particular, it was clear as day which was which.
I think on bass clarinet, you could probably get away with the plastic reeds most of the time, perhaps only switching to cane for particular repertoire. For soprano- no way, play wood or the audience is going to know.
I use a no. 4 reed. Its really fun and it has a better sound on the higher registers, especially on the 3rd register.
Reeds are a very personal thing, what they think of those reeds might be completely different to others. Personally I run legere signature 3.5 on clarinet and 3.25 on bass clarinet. However I do hop between legere and vandoren v12 3.5 for both bass clarinet and clarinet. In the end i do prefer the legere reeds just because they work for me. And here in Canada where it's a heat storm one day and a snow storm the next (and my inability to work on reeds) my cane reeds don't always make the sound I want where the legere reeds will work in any condition.
Absolutely! Like I've said to a few other commenters, this is all a very personal thing. I'm not telling anyone to change what they use, nor am I saying "I'm right." - Just giving my 2¢ as usual.
Reed may be personal, but the sound they produce isn't. If it sticks out like a sore thumb (especially on a clarinet), EVERYBODY will know it.
i’m a flute/bassoon player and this was very helpful
"now its not behaving" haha, yup, my entire life
I use Legere exclusively , but on saxes. One has to warm them up for 2-3 minutes. One should also find mouthpieces
that play well with Legere. On sax there are 3 models of Legere reeds. I have this problem solved and go to my
gigs totally confident in my reed situation. WHAT A RELIEF!!!! If I play long gigs, i will rotate reeds. I use a system to see how many gigs i have played on each reed. For me , the Legere on tenor can split on the tip if i´m really working extreme
altissimo- into the 5th octave. I will practice that kind of thing on reeds that are past their prime. Throw out all preconceptions
and really explore the possibilities!
I play clarinet and use 3 1/2 reeds as well and I have both a plastic red and wooden reeds, but I have to say that wooden reeds, in my opinion, give off a better sound and feel better as far as vibration. When I play my plastic reed, I feel like I have to push a lot more air out. Awesome experiment!!! I was intrigued!!!!!!!
I'd be curious to see you try some of the different synthetic reeds with different mouthpieces. Just a comparison between synthetic. I definitely don't like all of them. Some are a bit stuffy to me, but I found the legere American cut works really well with my jazz alto setup. Also you might need a lower strength to have a similar feel.
Laughing because I’m an Oboe player. They don’t understand reed struggles like us double reed players do.
Exactly! I play alto sax but I'm an oboe player first. I chipped the corner of my alto reed and it played just fine, but I did the same to my oboe reed a month ago and it didn't play! Single reed peeps will never understand.
Lol I understand
I basically play every single woodwind instrument and the instruments that have the least struggles is the flutes. Also I play alto for marching band, my reed gets banged up all the time and it still plays fine. But my oboe reed on the other hand :/. My oboe fell on the floor and chipped the corner of it, then right after that, someone stepped on the reed by accident. I was dead on the inside.
Yeah I play Trombone which is a much easier life lol
@@spug9338 Just wait, we have many issues..
As a self-taught beginner, I’m finding the Legere “European cut” 3.0 strength on a Yamaha 4C works well enough for me. The thing I hear about plastic reeds is that they’re supposed to be good for slap tonguing.
I´m sorry guys , but on the playbacks, the plastic reeds sounded more even and bigger and warmer. It is all very subjective, and
I think you should work a little more with the plastic and keep in mind my earlier suggestions. You still have to work at it to to get what you want.
Michael is a Vandoren artist so it's likely he'll stay Vandoren. if he spent more time trying Legeres (and worst case situation switching a mouthpiece), he could probably end up with a Legere setup he likes. but it's unlikely he'll do that
must be subjective. I thought the plastic reeds were missing a comparative ton of resonance, sounding thin and flat especially on the slower etude. I imagine the quality of one's playback system might have an effect too.
No way. The cane reeds had such a depth that I could tell was missing from the plastic reeds instantly. The plastic reeds do sound smoother but it makes it sound artificial. Like digital vs traditional art. One just has the extra touch to it that gives it a special richness.
I have the same issue with the oboe reeds. They have no lower partials and so they sound thin and waxy. Much better than the opd fiber cane plastic reeds, but still not something i can play on in concert
"Plastic doesn't have that 'bark'". Who would have thought that wood would have "bark"? 😀
Thank you Michael for this video. I use and prefer cane reeds. I like very much to working on in my reeds. It´s a art work very pleasured!
Légère user here. I use European Cut 3 with a Vandoren 5JB for my Bb clarinet (used to play the Signature cut before that), and a saxophone Signature 2,5 with a Brilhart "made for Buescher" on my Buescher Alto clarinet (yes, saxophone reed... no alto Signature no more in the catalog... but works very well). What I like in those reeds : free blowing, help me to feel comfortable and express myself, they are sturdy, long last, I like the feeling on the tongue more than a cane reed. It's a part of me and my sound when I play clarinet. I understand it's a choice, but that's how I feel.
Marching band ha!
So I played the oboe.
Then they handed me a saxophone and said you’re marching anyway.
i dont even play a wind instrument...
but after the first round i got all of them right 😂😂
i can just really hear the difference
It is very easy to tell which is which just by the start of the note
I still prefer cane reeds. I use the Ridenour method to prepare them and have found that each reed has it's own pros and cons but i can tweak them for maximum performance. They also have a more flexible dynamic range which adds more emotion.
Thanks for the demo.
Rik spector
I had a similar reaction when trying one on bass clarinet, but after hearing how well Katherine sounded on Bb soprano I'm interested in trying one on that instrument.
I'm perfectly happy playing my clarinet with Vandoren 2.5 reeds as they make a very mellow sound. I don't think that I would want to change to plastic ones as they have a harsh sound that I don't like. Thank you very much for this very informative video you both. Very helpful and enjoyable to watch. I will be getting my clarinet out again this week. Can you do a video on preventing squeaks? I have a consistent problem, which I think is caused by my fingers not covering holes properly, but it might be something else. Also I often find that the note B often doesn't speak, it's very temperamental and annoying!! Thank you both very much and have a lovely day.
Thank God for plastic reeds and plastic coated reeds! I'm allergic to the oils in wood reeds and now I can play without getting a rash on my lips!
Thank goodness for the invention of plastic reeds cause I broke like 7 wooden reeds in one month during marching season (then I ended up splitting the plastic reed during rehearsal)
Ever consider the reed woodwinds might not be your thing? Perhaps a nice trumpet or trombone would be a better choice?
The thing with the Legeres is they just always work. I have friends who play them because it gives them confidence they can’t always be sure of with cane, and confidence in the tools is obviously a big deal (I actually wonder if this is why professionals seem to be switching - the very high consistency and reliability is just more valuable than a slight tone quality loss?). I have two Legeres in my case for when the environment is weird (usually outside) and nothing else is working, or when my best cane reeds are already waterlogged from playing all day, or whatever. I was nonetheless surprised by the fact that I could ID the cane almost all the time (I got all the Bb tests, almost all the bass) just because the sound slightly lacked the richness and roundness of cane, at least as recorded and on my headphones. They’re getting really close, but for me they aren’t quite there yet and I’ll live with my V21s and associated hassles and wait for the next version of the synthetics.
The plastic reeds have a smooth, almost blank feel to them. It's like, where is the wood in the woodwind? I much prefer the more organic, resonant tone of the cane reeds.
Many years ago, I got to be the guinea pig trying out a plastic reed on the bassoon. it definitely felt different in the mouth, and was not giving the range of tone I was accustomed to. I stuck with the cane, even though the plastic was cheaper. Sometimes cheaper is not worth it.
Conclusion: organic vs synthetic, analogue vs digital. Both are different, but not significantly so. Whether or not one is better is a matter of taste.
Great video. I’m a legere signature series fan as I hate having those bad reed days.
As always there will be a slight compromise if you choose either cane or plastic.
Thanks for this video
The legere reeds as they warm after let’s say 30 mins of playing get softer which for me makes it more dynamic. Xx
Honestly I now use a legere EUROPEAN CUT (the other ones are trash) strength 4.5 permanently and I'm never going back to wood they're consistent and sound great. TIP: If you want to make them last longer, rinse off the back of the reed after every time you play on it to prevent spit from drying in the cracks, I've been doing this and I've been playing on the same plastic reed for five months and it still sounds great
You two should recut this vid after getting used to the Legeres. Once you get your embouchure used to the smaller adjustments that plastic/nylon requires, you might be quite surprised at how much more consistent the Legeres are from reed to reed. Just sitting down with any new reed cut - even bamboo, takes some getting used to. Also, try going down 1/2 stiffness.
Disclamer - I also play Van Doren on my Yamaha (4) and Buffet Crampon (3.5).
I gave those plastic reeds a good test over some time. The thing that I hated was the "buzz" sensation on the lips. The sound, nothing I could put my finger on, but preferred the cane.
My friend uses the legere contrabass reed and he loves it, im more of a fibracell or bari guy myself. Love the way they sound with my high schools selmer bass clarinet
I love the plastic reeds for my wooden buffet its makes the sound more brighter and less effort of air
The bass clarinet that you played sounds so much different from mine
Thank you for great vids. In regards to the synthetic reeds, it is important to note that though they aren't better than cane, they are great for doublers and those of us who live in dry climates. I'm in Santa Fe, NM.
Anyone know the piece at 4:09 ?
I just bought a Leger reed (currently in the mail somewhere) and am hoping it may be helpful for those scorching day, outside, summer community band concerts where keeping a reed wet is almost impossible.
I got a légère European signature size 3,5 recently. The sound was far better that the 'classic' signature Reed!
Did you try them in that video ?
Even though they might not quite play as well, the strong point of plastic reeds is their consistency from day-to-day since they aren't influenced by weather, so you don't waste time and money and stress finding a good reed. Sometimes that is more important.
So true.
I've been trying them with some of my students this week and I have some very happy campers. These kids have auditions soon and they need stability.
I’m not a fan of the Legere reeds at all. I was running into the same issues you described with your bass clarinet- but I experienced those problems on both my soprano and bass clarinets. I’m a purist with my Vandoren reeds (I use V-12s). However, a friend of mine suggested I try Silverstein Works reeds. I like them (so far) in past two months I’ve used them. I noticed they have a synthetic reed called Alta Ambipoly, and they claim to be a synthetic reed that sounds like a cane reed. They only have this reed available for Bb soprano clarinet, but I actually like it! I have two of them right now and they have a surprisingly bright and resonant sound! I use them for gigs when I am playing more “pop-ish” stuff that requires me to play a little brighter. I’m still a purist when playing concert band or orchestra literature though, and I’ll keep playing my cane reeds there. Have you tried Silverstein Works yet? I’m curious to know your thoughts.
i would like to ask, if any of you has experienced this problem, I used to play bass clarinet with legere signature reeds, and after a little while of using it, I notice that some cracks appears, they didn´t go all the way trough but nearly!
¿anyone has experienced this problem?
cesar hashmi manfredi i had this problem last year when i played alto in marching season. My reed would have a crack going down the reed within the first week even though i felt like i never bit down to hard.
I'm new to the Bass Clarinet. I have the easiest time with Harry Hartmann's (Fiberreed) Hemp Tenor Sax reeds on my BC (Kessler Model 2 low C BC), using either Yamaha BD5 or Selmer Focus MPC. Have you tried Fiberreeds on your BC?
I tested the Fibercane Oboe Reed for 25 years. The manufacturer neglected the upkeep of the tooling which was extremely complicated and labor-intensive.
Wholesaled to Selmer, in Elkhart Indiana and they distributed these reeds all over the United States. and parts of Europe.The schools don’t invest in oboe players anymore. I still make professional oboe reeds.
They were actually very excellent reeds for beginning oboists, since they played consistently. I had my first one in 1966 or 1967 at 11 or 12 years old. Some plastic reeds have their merits.
Where have you guys been living? Under a trumpet player's case? I was using nylon reeds in 1976. Solved the biggest predicament for a marching band clarinetist - good clarion registry response while maintaining great lows - no squeaks at high knee 8 to 5!
Can you review the Fibre Cell reeds against both the Cane Reed and the Legere Reed. I use synthetic reeds due to a cane allergy, but much prefer the Fibre Cell.
I played alto saxophone for 4 years and I've found that vandoren was the best for me. I liked it because it made my sax sound clearer than the reeds my band teacher provided.
My teacher uses 2.5 legeres with the rovner dark ligature on a Premiere mouthpiece by HITE. He said his last read played for two years while doing 1.5 hour shows for a circus plus teaching and stuff. I happened to have the same set-up for tenor (then also bought it for alto) and it works great at my level as well. They are very consistent, and the benefit of not having to mess with reeds is a huge set of benefits. You have to clean off the reed of build-up more like a mouthpiece though, but that's low maintenance by comparison to cane.
I love what you guys are wearing. I need to buy it😂
I use Legere reeds exclusively now. While its clear that a really good cane reed is better, not having to practice the ritual around maintaining current and grooming new reeds allows me to spend a little more time practicing. Plus, on concert day I never worry about chipping my favorite reed because the Legere is always ready to go. Having said all that, if there was a situation where I needed to produce my best sound with the clearest articulation I would use a cane reed and pray.
It would have been interesting to have one of you do one round where you ONLY played cane or ONLY played plastic to see whether the listener had a bias on expecting a difference. Like the control group in a double blind study. Interesting video.
OMG you're totally right. That would have been smart. (Sigh, that's why I'm not a statistician)
Assuming I knew how to play the Nuvo Dood, and wanted to move to wooden reeds.
How do I choose one which would fit?
I had a friend in HS that used a plastic reed on his Alto Sax for marching band. Sounded alright and was stupid loud.
Which Legere reeds were these? Legere make two series of professional clarinet reeds, Signature and Classic, and the Signature series has an alternative variation called European signature.
Is there any clarinetist that can help?
My clarinet sounds wonky when it plays high B or C. They sound the same!
It has never happened before, and I have always been able to play those notes. If you know how to fix it, or can give me any advice, please reply to this comment!
maybe one of your "springs" came loose. This happened to me 2 years ago when one of the small metal bars unclicked so when i played open g it would sound like f sharp. just check if all the small metal bar things are clicked. sorry it's kinda hard to explain.
One of your tone holes is blocked. Its either a left index finger hole or a register tube. Clean it-them
Hey Michael, I experienced the same thing you demonstrated with Legere bass clarinet reeds, both the Signature and Classic. Try a tenor sax STUDIO CUT. Solved most of the issues, for me anyway. It's still not a cane reed, but the slight differences are not worth it to me to monkey around with cane reeds anymore. Thanks for the video!
I sit next to a bass player that plays with the Tenor Sax reed too
I like Legeres, except . . . on bass clarinet, where I just don't like the sound. For soprano clarinet, the European cut is much better and to me seems like it would usally be about the 2nd-3rd best reed in a box of cane, certainly good enough for rehearsals and, often, concerts.
On thing that hasn't been mentioned is that Legeres are an absolute Godsend for pit work. I like the sound of Legeres on sax, but more importantly, you often need to pick up a horn that has been sitting for 20++ minutes and come in on an exposed part - with a Legere, you know it's going to work. This past summer, I had 6 horns in a pit and used Legeres on 5 of them (including bass clarinet, really no alternative).
Thanks for the great video...some of them were hard to guess correctly.
I have done a similar comparison on my Soprano and Alto Sax of Legere and Vandoren reeds. I have found that their comparison chart is a little off.
If I play on a Vandoren 3 they say I should use 3.25 of 3.5. I think that a 3.0 Legere is a better comparison.
Maybe try with adjusting down and see if you get the responsiveness and power you are looking for.
I'll need to purchase the plastic clarinet reeds, but I'm different. For Soprano clarinet, I use D'addario Reserve Classic 3.5+ reeds and for Bass, Contra, Tenor Sax, and Bari Sax, I use plastic reeds.
My band director in high school always warned about plastic reeds "messing up" your articulation. I used a plastic reed on the contra-alto all year my senior year and I don't think that was necessarily true, but this video definitely shows the minutiae between plastic and cane reeds, and where they may be better for different situations. I use a 5RV and 3.5 V21s in both concert and marching settings because I care about my tone. Some of my friends in my marching section use plastic reeds and they really don't make that much of a difference on the field, but after watching this video and knowing what I already know, I am still not going to recommend plastic reeds for concert settings unless there are extenuating circumstances, maybe for larger instruments and money is an issue.
just subbed love it
My take: Legere reeds can and should be worked on as wooden reeds in terms of sanding and filing( of course not on the vamp, just the top). Huge improvement. Buy slightly hard, then customize. Legere reeds are good for doubling situations in that they always respond the way you can predict. They work on clarinet better than sax in my experience. They're good for just leaving on the horn and picking up for a quick practice interlude. They're great for students who don't know how to care for wood reeds. They can make you really appreciate a good wood reed, but you can get used to them and not miss wood.
Great test. I personally didn't hear much of a difference between cane and plastic. I have been using Legere for about three years and much prefer them to cane. No messing with cane to balance it etc. Put it on and play, no need to wet the reed. They last a long time. I agree, you need to match the reed with an appropriate mouthpiece. Thanks for the video.
I made the full switch to Legere Euro cut Signatures on Bb, but that's because I just so happened to own a few mouthpieces that were quite compatible with them. I have yet to switch to the Legere Signatures on bass or on my saxes because quite frankly they don't sound that great on my mouthpieces and unlike with the soprano clarinet, I'm not as willing to go out and find the right mouthpiece for the Legere on my other instruments.
I don't think Legere reeds are at the point where they could completely replace cane. If they just so happen to work on your setup or you're willing to go out of your way to spend $200-$400 searching for a new mouthpiece setup, make the switch! I'm super happy with mine and am at the point where I'm taking them to major performances and auditions. If they don't work for you, no problem! Use what sounds best and feels best to you.
I need Reed help. I haven't played a woodwind in a couple years because of the instrumentation my band needed. Now my cane reeds go soft and become unplayable after less than three hours of use. I got a plastic Reed but it takes so so so much more air and gives me a headache and my jaw hurts after 10 minutes of use. What can I do to make my cane reeds last longer or make my plastic one hurt less?
yeah her name is ms. cooke and shes my 6th grade music teacher
Interesting
I have a few of these reeds for my bassclarinet just to try them but only used them in case of emergency.I also have Fibracell composite reeds which i am very curious to compare these with the legere and cane reeds.I hope that you want to do a same comparison with fibracell reeds
I tried out plastic reeds for a little while about a year and a half ago and found I like cane better as well. I was playing in marching band and orchestra and found that, yeah the plastic reeds lasted through the marching abuse but didn’t give me the volume I needed for that setting. I switched back to cane permanently when I actually cracked my plastic reed, which is tough to do!
For soprano clarinet, the Legere soprano saxophone reeds surprisingly gave me a better result than the Legere clarinet reeds.
Just going through a carton of cane and inspecting them for suitability is reason enough to choose the more uniform synthetic. So a move towards uniformity at all times is a plus in my book.
Tone? In solo work, perhaps cane. But synthetic is so... set and forget. I can't help but prefer synthetic reeds in the great majority of circumstances.
Is there anyway i can find a reed for a sax-a-boom????