I had no idea this is what went into making reeds. Someone on Reddit mentioned bassoonists often make their own reed's and found your video and watched the whole process. So fascinating.
I played the bassoon 50+ years ago. They were making some plastic reeds back then. I never liked them. They were always too stiff. Thanks for the video.
Thanks for this video. I play the bagpipe, and as the reeds are similar this helped me to understand just how much time and expertise goes into making a reed, and it got rid of any desire I had to try and make them myself. :)
I would love to observe you utilizing the dry method. Since it was the only method my teachers taught. I'm not acquainted with the Skinner method although most of the students I came up with (70's) went to him.
To me, the second reed sounded a bit "dry" at the end. Just loved the sound of it before the last adjustments. (Having no musical ear, according to my wife; tone deaf) But I know when I enjoy a tone, especially a bass note.... ;-)
Out of curiosity, are you using a custom MD profiler template? It could just be an optical illusion of the video, but it looks like the point at which your template changes angle is set further back than what's on my MD profiler. I ask, because I've been trying to get a profile that's thin enough to easily fold, like you do in this video, without thinning the eventual heart too much. With the experimentation I've done so far, the thinnest I've managed to get the center fold is between 45-50mm thick, which requires supporting it with a metal ruler when folding, which for me usually means my collars don't line up. There's a video Ariel Detwiler has where she shows a method for correcting that, and that's worked for me so far, but that adds an extra step to my process, and I'm lazy.
Nothing custom. What I do is set the barrel pins to be on the rounded side, so it doesn't profile a spine. Additionally, you can move the template laterally, which puts the point where the slope begins farther back on the reed, and makes for a thinner tip compared to the collar.
I've been making bassoon reeds for nearly 60 years and I learned a few things today! Your beveling the back end of the cane, for the tube, with a sander is a great idea. I think I'll try it out with hand sanding first, though. A question: why butchers twine to wrap as you form the tube? I've been using just my reed thread (from an odd-colored spool I don't want to use any more) forever. Are there advantages to using the butchers twine?
The butchers twine is considerably thicker, stronger, and a heck of a lot cheaper than reed thread. And just so you know, I have reverted back to using a large file for beveling instead of the orbital sander.
@@TrentJacobs thanks, I’ll try the twine. I’ll play with both sanding and filing on the bevels-that’s something where I’m not super happy with what I’m doing now.
Well, you are seeing the entire process, so the length of the video until I'm done play testing the first one is the time it takes. For me, roughly 15 minutes. Probably a bit less. Failure rate is really low. Less than 1/50 I would say unless I run into a particularly fragile batch when they're just all splitting, but that's really uncommon. I'm pretty high yield though, most people are either pickier than me or I'm just able to make them work. I'm not sure which is more accurate.
I’ve been playing bassoon for two and a bit years and I feel like it would be really fun to try and make a reed, is there a good starting kit that i can buy online that already has the shaped cane that you would recommend?
Great video! I’m clarinetist, trying to make reeds. What kind of guilliotine are you using to cut the cane to length? I’m looking for a similar one, but commercial guillotines are quite expensive for me, I wonder if it’s possible to find a cheaper one. Could you help me with that? Thank you!
My guillotine is specifically made for bassoon and contrabassoon reeds. I doubt it could be set short enough for even bass clarinet reeds. It's definitely not set for the correct diameter, you probably couldn't even fit a piece of clarinet cane in my guillotine. I know nothing about clarinet reed making equipment.
Trent Jacobs Thanks for the reply! Have you made it by yourself? If no is it a custom built specially for you or is it a commercial item that you can simply buy somewhere?
I need to buy reeds for my granddaughter, do you sell them to the public or can you tell me where can I buy good one. The ones sold in Amazon aren’t good. She is in her third studying year. Thanks, Luis.
Making your own reeds can ultimately be a money saver. To make a reed from Gouged, Shaped, and Profiled cane you will probably need to spend about $400 to get quality tools. You will likely need to make quite a few reeds before you start to make halfway decent ones.
I swear a recall you using the reeds n stuff tip profiler before. Have you always used the Rimpl? Do you have a strong preference for it or is it just what you ended up buying 10 years ago?
I have never owned a Reeds 'n' Stuff tip profiler. My university owns one. I've had the RImpl for about 12 years or so. I do prefer the Rimpl, just because of the open nature of how it operates, how the blade area is set up. The RnS and Rimpl both have curved blades and ball style template followers, and can have custom templates, so there's not that much achievable difference between the two if you find a template you like. The Rimpl does move farther down the blade though, and does some more blending with the back as a result.
17:35 OK YOU CAN N O T PROVE ME WRONG EVERY BASSOONIST WHEN THEY GET A NEW REED JUST PLAYS F SCALE, TO RANDOM CHROMATIC TO F, A, C, F, THEN BACK TO F SCALE WITH A RANDOM Eb I SWEAR I'M NOT WRONG!!!! 💀💀
There’s a reason for this. F major is one of the most comfortable and stable scales on the bassoon, so it gives a overall good sense of how the reed feels. The Eb and E natural are very unstable notes, and attacking them on a new reed gives you a sense of the reeds overall stability. Basically good testers to see where your reed is at
And this is why I am HAPPY to pay a skilled artisan to make my reeds :)
I had no idea this is what went into making reeds. Someone on Reddit mentioned bassoonists often make their own reed's and found your video and watched the whole process. So fascinating.
I completely understand why this is the most watched Bassoon reed making video on the internet.
I don't know why I'm watching this, but I'm enjoying it. Thanks!
I played the bassoon 50+ years ago. They were making some plastic reeds back then. I never liked them. They were always too stiff. Thanks for the video.
Thanks for this video. I play the bagpipe, and as the reeds are similar this helped me to understand just how much time and expertise goes into making a reed, and it got rid of any desire I had to try and make them myself. :)
Bagpipe reeds are a lot easier to make, I can assure you! LOL
Bassoon player: I can’t play today my reed broke :(
This dude: hold my cane
Ba dum SSSS
Fascinating. I watched the whole thing and I cannot play any instrument to save my life. Lol
On the last adjustment you can hear the difference. Cool, I played a bassoon in high school symphonic band.
I would love to observe you utilizing the dry method. Since it was the only method my teachers taught. I'm not acquainted with the Skinner method although most of the students I came up with (70's) went to him.
Weird I listen to this for when I go to sleep for me it’s like ASMR
Clever bevel trick, thanks!
I really like your video ! .... I see you have high quality machines, and a few neat tricks !!!
Спасибо, очень интересно!)
Why am I even here. I'm not a bassoonist.
same
watched the whole thing 😅
Thank that helped!
To me, the second reed sounded a bit "dry" at the end. Just loved the sound of it before the last adjustments. (Having no musical ear, according to my wife; tone deaf) But I know when I enjoy a tone, especially a bass note.... ;-)
Out of curiosity, are you using a custom MD profiler template? It could just be an optical illusion of the video, but it looks like the point at which your template changes angle is set further back than what's on my MD profiler. I ask, because I've been trying to get a profile that's thin enough to easily fold, like you do in this video, without thinning the eventual heart too much. With the experimentation I've done so far, the thinnest I've managed to get the center fold is between 45-50mm thick, which requires supporting it with a metal ruler when folding, which for me usually means my collars don't line up. There's a video Ariel Detwiler has where she shows a method for correcting that, and that's worked for me so far, but that adds an extra step to my process, and I'm lazy.
Nothing custom. What I do is set the barrel pins to be on the rounded side, so it doesn't profile a spine. Additionally, you can move the template laterally, which puts the point where the slope begins farther back on the reed, and makes for a thinner tip compared to the collar.
I've been making bassoon reeds for nearly 60 years and I learned a few things today! Your beveling the back end of the cane, for the tube, with a sander is a great idea. I think I'll try it out with hand sanding first, though. A question: why butchers twine to wrap as you form the tube? I've been using just my reed thread (from an odd-colored spool I don't want to use any more) forever. Are there advantages to using the butchers twine?
The butchers twine is considerably thicker, stronger, and a heck of a lot cheaper than reed thread.
And just so you know, I have reverted back to using a large file for beveling instead of the orbital sander.
@@TrentJacobs thanks, I’ll try the twine. I’ll play with both sanding and filing on the bevels-that’s something where I’m not super happy with what I’m doing now.
Great video! How much time would you estimate you spend per reed? What's the failure rate, ignoring the pieces you toss after splitting the cane?
Well, you are seeing the entire process, so the length of the video until I'm done play testing the first one is the time it takes. For me, roughly 15 minutes. Probably a bit less.
Failure rate is really low. Less than 1/50 I would say unless I run into a particularly fragile batch when they're just all splitting, but that's really uncommon. I'm pretty high yield though, most people are either pickier than me or I'm just able to make them work. I'm not sure which is more accurate.
Very informative reed making video. What are your wire spacing measurements?
32mm and 40mm from the fold, and about 5mm from the end. I use 116mm cane with 30mm profiled length.
I’ve been playing bassoon for two and a bit years and I feel like it would be really fun to try and make a reed, is there a good starting kit that i can buy online that already has the shaped cane that you would recommend?
Boiling water has changed my life
Great video! I’m clarinetist, trying to make reeds. What kind of guilliotine are you using to cut the cane to length? I’m looking for a similar one, but commercial guillotines are quite expensive for me, I wonder if it’s possible to find a cheaper one. Could you help me with that? Thank you!
My guillotine is specifically made for bassoon and contrabassoon reeds. I doubt it could be set short enough for even bass clarinet reeds. It's definitely not set for the correct diameter, you probably couldn't even fit a piece of clarinet cane in my guillotine. I know nothing about clarinet reed making equipment.
Trent Jacobs Thanks for the reply! Have you made it by yourself? If no is it a custom built specially for you or is it a commercial item that you can simply buy somewhere?
@@AntonMoiseyenko it is made by Rimpl.
Trent Jacobs oh great! Thank you!
I need to buy reeds for my granddaughter, do you sell them to the public or can you tell me where can I buy good one. The ones sold in Amazon aren’t good. She is in her third studying year. Thanks, Luis.
Tjbassoon.com/reeds !
What type of electric water boiler are you using? I have had trouble trying to find one that has the open top
Something like this
www.walmart.com/ip/Maxi-Matic-32-oz-Electric-Hot-Pot/21608860
Trent Jacobs awesome thank you!
By profiling after shaping it, don't you take the risk of taking off the top sides of the reed?
I've never had it happen. If it does, your profiler just needs to be set up differently.
That’s so hard
I’m 14 and trying to cut down on reed cost is this a good investment
Making your own reeds can ultimately be a money saver. To make a reed from Gouged, Shaped, and Profiled cane you will probably need to spend about $400 to get quality tools. You will likely need to make quite a few reeds before you start to make halfway decent ones.
If you plan on playing for years then yes.
how much do these reeds cost?
Do you have a link to the reamer bit that you own?
It's Rieger, very common. I just removed it from the handle. Google for "Rieger spiral reamer"
I see, thank you! Do you have any recommendations for hand tip cutters?
2:31 Where can I buy this machine?
It's made by Rimpl. You should search for them online and find a local dealer.
Thank you!!
I swear a recall you using the reeds n stuff tip profiler before. Have you always used the Rimpl? Do you have a strong preference for it or is it just what you ended up buying 10 years ago?
I have never owned a Reeds 'n' Stuff tip profiler. My university owns one. I've had the RImpl for about 12 years or so. I do prefer the Rimpl, just because of the open nature of how it operates, how the blade area is set up. The RnS and Rimpl both have curved blades and ball style template followers, and can have custom templates, so there's not that much achievable difference between the two if you find a template you like. The Rimpl does move farther down the blade though, and does some more blending with the back as a result.
Почему звук "Е" не строит? Переточена пружина!!!
My god, man, I am hoping this bassoon thingy plays itself after you install the reed because I don’t see you having time to practice.
17:35 OK YOU CAN N O T PROVE ME WRONG EVERY BASSOONIST WHEN THEY GET A NEW REED JUST PLAYS F SCALE, TO RANDOM CHROMATIC TO F, A, C, F, THEN BACK TO F SCALE WITH A RANDOM Eb I SWEAR I'M NOT WRONG!!!! 💀💀
There’s a reason for this. F major is one of the most comfortable and stable scales on the bassoon, so it gives a overall good sense of how the reed feels. The Eb and E natural are very unstable notes, and attacking them on a new reed gives you a sense of the reeds overall stability. Basically good testers to see where your reed is at
And I complain because I have to soak my reed. Sheesh
Students making their own reeds, cut costs, especially when beginners double reeds are so thin and break easily.
I play saxophone and guitar. I have never seen a real bassoon in real life, why am I watching this?
Instructions not clear enough. Accidentally sanded the tip of my umm yeah