I played a Grafton for years, and it was joy. The tone and intonation was great, and it handled my bebop style of playing really well. Sadly, after several years of playing, the little coiled springs got weaker and weaker, and the screwed in pads gradually gave out. I managed to contact (by telephone) the long retired man who actually assembled them in Grafton Way. He told me he still had many parts, probably enough to make one more! However, I was offered a fair sum for it, by a collector who lived in Germany, so I sold it and bought a Mark VI.
@@boomkruncher325zzshred5 try it if u do and it works u got a new brand of sax that might be cool cause you could make a carbon fiber one or use wood or metal infused print filament
The first wooden saxophone was a bass clarinet! Adolf Sax filed patents for the tenor sax and bass clarinet almost simultaneously. One cylindrical and the other conical. You will notice that they have the same length, same general form and same key.
That's true, that you can play reeds from saxophone on bass clarinet and on the other way around. But it depends if you play the French or German System on the bass clarinet due to the fact of the different width the mouthpieces are made with.
@@loganricherson My Trumpet Player obvlisousness is kicking in here, but aren't all reeds compatible across woodwind instruments like the clarinet and sax?
George made the curved sopranino sound nice, which I think very few people could do. A local music store used to have one on display; the owner joked about making it into a tie-tack.
The Casio DH100 is the one that got me back to playing the sax again. I sold my alto sax from my HS days, the Selmer Bundy from the mid 70's. and then I started repairing Yamaha Synth and ran across a Casio DH100, and found out that there is a thing called wind controller synth instrument. I now have a Aerophone AE-10 and a Yamaha Alto sax YAS-23.
I have been using a saxophone since I was in fourth grade, I am 11 years old, I am already in 6th grade and I have been watching your videos and every time I watch your videos I feel freer and with more memory, I have already been in countless presentations and the truth is I just love them, my saxophone is the alto saxophone but I would also like a fear, I mean two 😬
@@Heterandria4mosa feels like you're being a little unreasonable. they're not being that selfish, just asking if they could get some classical music every now and again.
I own one of the Casios. Never had much success playing it and it’s been in a box for about 25 years. 😂 Also recorded on a Keilwerth straight alto owned by the studio in the late 90s. Great horns.
Saxophone Journal featured a reproduction of an old photo of the vaudeville performer playing the straight baritone (it still had the loop in the top of the horn) back in the '90s. He used to stand on a small stool while playing it. The bell was about an inch off the floor.
St. Louis has a great sax player right now by the name of Kendrick Smith. Dude is a legend, and he plays on a straight alto... with a tenor mouthpiece... with a bari reed slapped on it. It is NUTS, which makes his sound super funky and recognizable and honestly it sounds pretty awesome
My name is Cornelius, and this video made me look up who almost everyone relates me to Cornelius Bumpus. I am not disappointed, I love hearing that man on the sax.
That Casio works great as wind controller with synth modules. I still have mine, bought from Manny's in 1987. Years later I bought an EWI. The Casio feels much more like a saxophone.
I have two of the Casios, and they are fun. It’s interesting to plug in a WIDI master Bluetooth output and play some really good voices with them. Years ago I took one to makers fair and hooked up the midi to my iPad moog synth. I carried a speaker in my backpack and had a lot of fun.
As soon as I saw the black ruby finish I KNEW it was a Cannonball! My dream sax is their raven finish with dark marbled stone keys 😍 I had the pleasure of getting to play one when I was 16 and I’ve been dreaming of owning one ever since!
I played a Selmer S80 I got new in high school played 7 hours a day for 20 years. I tested out all kinds of other Saxes even Mark Vi s but nothing compared to my S80 until one day I walked into an Atlanta music store and say a Cannonball Raven on display. I’d heard great things about Cannonball Saxes but never tried one out. I assumed it was going to be no contest compared to my Selmer but I was wrong. The Raven had the fullest boldest sound by far of any sax I’d ever played and it was so flexible I could bend notes and Growl without any effort at all it was almost like the notes played themselves the minute I thought them. I had to buy that horn on the spot. I still have my S80 but for pop and Rock music gigs it’s the cannonball all the way , not to mention the strikingly beautiful black finish . They are the best Saxes for solo rock music work in existence.
My little review on how the horns sounded to me: I’ve played one of those Graftons and they’re nice if a bit on the mellow side for me. The Vibrato sounded squirrelly and terrible. I play Cannonball Vintage Revival alto and tenor and a curved Big Bell soprano. They’ve shelved my MKVI and Yamaha. The straight alto, like a straight soprano, have a tone that I’ve always mentally categorized as “eggy”. I can’t explain that other than sounding oval or round. I played a straight sopranino and really liked it but again it was squirrelly. I like curved saxophones so I’d like to try a curved one. I own a Casio Digital Sax. For the money it was fantastic. I still have the mouthpiece and it would make all the difference in your ability to operate. I moved on to a Yamaha WX11 and eventually I became an EWI player. I was surprised at the saxophone quality of sound to the wooden sax. The mechanism work-arounds fascinate me. Is it…teak wood?
Years ago on the streets of New York City, I met a street musician playing a Buescher straight alto, with whom I had an enjoyable conversation. Soon after that I played a new straight alto made by Keilwerth, which I found superb.
As a combo breaker here, my fave was actually the sopranino. It has such a great rich sound for such a high pitched instrument. And that's amazing considering I always favor the lower ranges of instruments to both play and listen to (bass clarinet, bari sax, trombone, etc.).
I have one of those Casio DH, mine does have the black mouth piece. It does not sound good but it is sensitive to pressure, so using MIDI you can get a better sound.
I owned a Casio back in the 80s! And yes, it is a toy. But a really great toy. Mostly I used the midi connection to play my Roland Sound Canvas synth. The built in tones are useless. Thanks for the comparison. Loved the black ruby Cannonball look and sound.
Great vid, gents! I’m not a great sax player, but have been a massive fan for decades. Cheers from California. And hey, side note: if it doesn’t already exist, I propose November 6th as “International Saxophone Day”, in honor of the b-day of inventor Adolph Sax!
Have a straight alto myself (toneking). Really like Roland Kirk playing it (as well as the saxello) I can understand him using it, as the balance of the straight sax is easier if you play it one handed (along with other saxes as he is doing)
All were amazing, plus we got a little bit of history. Loved the wooden saxophone. It was my favorite, thank you. Great video 👍 cheers from America 🇺🇸 🍻
I also started with a Casio dh100. Had to repair the electronics and replace the internal breath tube with something (don’t remember what). I still have it and it still works.
The wooden one sounded constipated. The Grafton sounded fine, though, and the Straight Alto. But I think my favorite, soundwise, is the Dragonball. Depends on it use, though, and sometimes I would probably prefer the Grafton for its softer sound.
I've got a Cannonball and I agree! The sound cuts through and it's still smooth! I'm still shopping for a good mouthpiece to make it sing more. The metal Jody Jazz I have is good but I know this horn can blow! I'm thinking a rubber mouthpiece might be better for it. Thanks for the review of these different saxes! If I ever see a wooden sax, I wanna play it! 😄
I love that you gentlemen use the neck straps. They were shunned in my music classes because our teacher wanted us to develop good arm strength. Which is important sure, but so is not letting a 13 year old drop a $2000 dollar (beginner) instrument. Its not like they're adjustable or anything😅 Personally, I play another woodwind, B flat clarinet, but I still use a neck strap because my instrument is precious to me. Accidents can happen you know...
🤣🤣 I still have two of the Casio horns, I used them to control samplers in the 80’s and even in a silver bucket headed robot band! 🤖 I have several of the black mouthpieces and the fingering is based on Recorder.
I found the Cannonball the nicest sounding one of them all, but the first one, the cream colored one, would have been my second choice. But the cannonball was by far, the best sounding one. The wooden one would have been much better if it wasn't made to be a display, if it was made to actually be an instrument, I bet it would have sounded excellent. I used to play the bassoon, and went to the clarinet, and I came across a rosewood Clarinet out of China and although it was made in China it sounded so beautiful and rich, but I was in a place in my life where I couldn't afford the $900 it cost to buy it, and later I stopped playing altogether because of illness. I wish I could still play wind instruments, but those days are gone.
As someone who had his first (scarring) experience with free jazz this week I am in no way surprised that Ornette Coleman played on a plastic saxophone.
I think I have to go with the straight alto, it has a very special timbre, and I like it. Not a sax player myself, bassoonist, though the family intrigues and maybe I should try it some day.
A hybrid brass sax with standard keys and ligature, but with a wooden bell, bow, and mouthpeice would retain that nice slightly dampened breathy sound while staying as reliable as a regular instrument. No more burying it in silica to travel with it.
On the contrary, for a straight alto I would mic it in the middle, the same as for a soprano sax or clarinet. And if I had a second mic, I would put it below the bell. Most of the sound comes out *last open hole* not the end of the bell. On a curved alto or tenor, it just so happens that the bell and the middle of the horn are in the same spot, which is great for mic'ing. However, as you can hear in this recording, the straight alto recording sounds very hollow, apart from the notes like middle D which have more of the holes closed, because the mic is too far away from where the sound is originating for most notes. Of course you'll lose the "full honk" sound for low B and Bb, but that's a better compromise than mic'ing a straight woodwind and at the bell and losing the midrange.
Thank you guys! very nice to see and to listen also! 👂👂 I was surprised at the end of the video how the plastic Sax was sounded like the Baritone at most time 😳 But obviously the Baritone smoother at the end. The sound I most liked was the wooden Sax. May if the mecanics were by metal insteed of wood will resolve many problems. Tuning with this wood mecanic will be really a mass. Great Job!
Lennie Tristano invented Free Jazz, his first recordings of this kind of Jazz were in 1949, Coleman seems to often get the credit, i guess mainly because he used the term Free Jazz for his LP, which then got used as the name of this genre, i don't think they were calling it Free Jazz in 1949 Loved hearing the wooden saxophone btw, great video
I played L.A. Sax's straight alto when they first came out. The tone was different from playing on a hard floor or a carpeted floor. I would have loved to hear, from the audience seats, what it sounded like played in an orchestra pit. I spoke with the designer, and I apologize for not remembering his name, but he said it was not just a matter of scabbing in a straight section between the main body and bell section. The low B and Bb tone holes had to be moved a bit. Everything from low D on down had to be redesigned.
The Grafton sounds fantastic. I never realized it was acrylic. The wood and the plastic sound significantly inferior in their own ways with either loud action or valve vibration. Unique, but I wouldn't actually want to listen to a whole piece on one. Thanks for presenting them all.
finally.......a saxophone that really is a woodwind instrument
i was trying to think of a similar joke 😭
I got wood just thinking about it
@@Chris-sv8tyAYO
@@Chris-sv8ty ayo u got wood for wood? or is it bc sexyphone?
When I first started playing tenor, I thought it was a brass instrument
I played a Grafton for years, and it was joy. The tone and intonation was great, and it handled my bebop style of playing really well. Sadly, after several years of playing, the little coiled springs got weaker and weaker, and the screwed in pads gradually gave out. I managed to contact (by telephone) the long retired man who actually assembled them in Grafton Way. He told me he still had many parts, probably enough to make one more! However, I was offered a fair sum for it, by a collector who lived in Germany, so I sold it and bought a Mark VI.
This makes me wonder:
Could you 3D print all the parts for a saxophone? Would it sound good?
@@boomkruncher325zzshred5 try it if u do and it works u got a new brand of sax that might be cool cause you could make a carbon fiber one or use wood or metal infused print filament
@@boomkruncher325zzshred5 The only important question is: who's going to stop you?
i believe johnny Hodges played one of these but I'm not sure. does any one know?
When playing a ballad, what type of tonality, in your opinion, does the Grafton create for you?
The first wooden saxophone was a bass clarinet! Adolf Sax filed patents for the tenor sax and bass clarinet almost simultaneously. One cylindrical and the other conical. You will notice that they have the same length, same general form and same key.
And their reeds are cross compatable
That's true, that you can play reeds from saxophone on bass clarinet and on the other way around. But it depends if you play the French or German System on the bass clarinet due to the fact of the different width the mouthpieces are made with.
Interesting.
@@loganricherson My Trumpet Player obvlisousness is kicking in here, but aren't all reeds compatible across woodwind instruments like the clarinet and sax?
@@Bean_Soup not really
The grafton is absolutely easily the best sounding of all of them. Not joking.
….at least as much as the recording setup conveys.
Sounded great!
The fact that nobody is making a serious plastic horn is a shame.
I agree 100%
Yup, that's the one I liked the best too. It's from an era when things were still made with pride.
That see-through one is a bong and you can't tell me otherwise
George + Michael = Best Duo ( iykyk )
George made the curved sopranino sound nice, which I think very few people could do. A local music store used to have one on display; the owner joked about making it into a tie-tack.
I love hearing about people so incompetent that they make their own product jokes. Please tell us more. Was he your father?
I love the sound of that Grafton. Nothing quite like it. It definitely gave 50's jazz vibes.
I like the curved sopranino one, because its so cute and has a beautiful high pitch, but the canonball was cool too!
I can't imagine the face of the sax repairman who opens up the case for a regular adjustment and finds a wooden saxophone.
can't imagine open an electronic one..
As a former repair tech, it'd begin as ecstatic delight but soon warp into abject terror. If you've ever seen The Lighthouse, you'd know the look.
@@gregornolzen570 Those we send to the keyboard tech!
This would genuinely be my dream career. Just a room of saxophones, getting to play constantly... Heaven
The Casio DH100 is the one that got me back to playing the sax again. I sold my alto sax from my HS days, the Selmer Bundy from the mid 70's. and then I started repairing Yamaha Synth and ran across a Casio DH100, and found out that there is a thing called wind controller synth instrument. I now have a Aerophone AE-10 and a Yamaha Alto sax YAS-23.
Wooden Saxophone portion starts here: 13:25
Thank you king
You’re my saviour
Cannonball is in my neighborhood. I have a straight soprano brute. Really nice. I have been really intrigued by the straight alto.
I have been using a saxophone since I was in fourth grade, I am 11 years old, I am already in 6th grade and I have been watching your videos and every time I watch your videos I feel freer and with more memory, I have already been in countless presentations and the truth is I just love them, my saxophone is the alto saxophone but I would also like a fear, I mean two 😬
As a classical saxophonist i would love someone play some classical music on these saxophones too, so you can compare also how that sounds!
world doesn't revolve around you!
@@Heterandria4mosa feels like you're being a little unreasonable. they're not being that selfish, just asking if they could get some classical music every now and again.
I actually use a black nickel cannonball alto. I’ve had it for maybe 4 years now and absolutely love it
Wow, black nickel on a sax looks sharp!
I would have liked to hear the wooden saxophone unedited.
I own one of the Casios. Never had much success playing it and it’s been in a box for about 25 years. 😂 Also recorded on a Keilwerth straight alto owned by the studio in the late 90s. Great horns.
It would be really cool if y’all found a straight baritone saxophone I’ve only seen one in person it’s really freakin cool.
@@hampter2407 why hello Hampter
I've seen one at a saxophone museum in Rome.
@@mangocane8977 nice that must’ve been cool I got to see one in a sax shop that the owner was making
You have to stand on the second floor while you play for audience on the ground floor
Saxophone Journal featured a reproduction of an old photo of the vaudeville performer playing the straight baritone (it still had the loop in the top of the horn) back in the '90s. He used to stand on a small stool while playing it. The bell was about an inch off the floor.
I have the DH-100. Thankfully, it still works and has all of its components in the box! I got it as a child, and I still love it❤
St. Louis has a great sax player right now by the name of Kendrick Smith. Dude is a legend, and he plays on a straight alto... with a tenor mouthpiece... with a bari reed slapped on it. It is NUTS, which makes his sound super funky and recognizable and honestly it sounds pretty awesome
My name is Cornelius, and this video made me look up who almost everyone relates me to Cornelius Bumpus. I am not disappointed, I love hearing that man on the sax.
That Casio works great as wind controller with synth modules. I still have mine, bought from Manny's in 1987. Years later I bought an EWI. The Casio feels much more like a saxophone.
We need a crystal and glass one.
OH, a CONCRETE one!!! :P
I have two of the Casios, and they are fun. It’s interesting to plug in a WIDI master Bluetooth output and play some really good voices with them. Years ago I took one to makers fair and hooked up the midi to my iPad moog synth. I carried a speaker in my backpack and had a lot of fun.
I’ve had two of them since the 80’s, back in the day we played them in a battery powered robot band! 🤖🤖🤖
My favorite looking is the Grafton, favorite sounding is the Cannonball.
As soon as I saw the black ruby finish I KNEW it was a Cannonball! My dream sax is their raven finish with dark marbled stone keys 😍 I had the pleasure of getting to play one when I was 16 and I’ve been dreaming of owning one ever since!
I played a Selmer S80 I got new in high school played 7 hours a day for 20 years. I tested out all kinds of other Saxes even Mark Vi s but nothing compared to my S80 until one day I walked into an Atlanta music store and say a Cannonball Raven on display. I’d heard great things about Cannonball Saxes but never tried one out. I assumed it was going to be no contest compared to my Selmer but I was wrong. The Raven had the fullest boldest sound by far of any sax I’d ever played and it was so flexible I could bend notes and Growl without any effort at all it was almost like the notes played themselves the minute I thought them. I had to buy that horn on the spot. I still have my S80 but for pop and Rock music gigs it’s the cannonball all the way , not to mention the strikingly beautiful black finish . They are the best Saxes for solo rock music work in existence.
The acrylic one sounded just that little bit better than the others, but that cannonball was very close.
But let's face it all saxophones sound sweet.
My little review on how the horns sounded to me:
I’ve played one of those Graftons and they’re nice if a bit on the mellow side for me. The Vibrato sounded squirrelly and terrible. I play Cannonball Vintage Revival alto and tenor and a curved Big Bell soprano. They’ve shelved my MKVI and Yamaha. The straight alto, like a straight soprano, have a tone that I’ve always mentally categorized as “eggy”. I can’t explain that other than sounding oval or round. I played a straight sopranino and really liked it but again it was squirrelly. I like curved saxophones so I’d like to try a curved one. I own a Casio Digital Sax. For the money it was fantastic. I still have the mouthpiece and it would make all the difference in your ability to operate. I moved on to a Yamaha WX11 and eventually I became an EWI player. I was surprised at the saxophone quality of sound to the wooden sax. The mechanism work-arounds fascinate me. Is it…teak wood?
..shelved...MKVI? BLASpHEMY!! :)
Obviously, the Cannonball was the most playable, but I’m always impressed with the Grafton’s capabilities! Very fun video guys!
We had a DH 100 in the 80s. DH stands for "Digital Horn" there was a black mouth piece originally. Really cool seeing it again
The Grafton sounded lovely
Indeed, adding some color changing LEDs would be a blast on that see-through sax! Especially if each note has a different color...
The cannonball sounded the best by far I think… followed fairly closely by the acrylic one.
I love the Casio because I love chiptune.
I love the way the straight alto sounds. I'm glad the algorithms recommended your channel. I'll see you next time I'm in London.
Years ago on the streets of New York City, I met a street musician playing a Buescher straight alto, with whom I had an enjoyable conversation. Soon after that I played a new straight alto made by Keilwerth, which I found superb.
The straight alto is soooooo airy. The curved sopranino is so full! The historical info was so educational!
As a combo breaker here, my fave was actually the sopranino. It has such a great rich sound for such a high pitched instrument.
And that's amazing considering I always favor the lower ranges of instruments to both play and listen to (bass clarinet, bari sax, trombone, etc.).
The cannonball and the acrylic both sounded so nice.
The wooden model is sooo sweet. As the horn into a fairy tale
The sopranino is adorable!!! I thought it had a very sweet tone. Not a sax player, but if I were this is the one I'd choose.
I used a Cannonball alto in college. Loved that horn. It had such a bright, beautiful tone but it could still blend very well.
I have one of those Casio DH, mine does have the black mouth piece. It does not sound good but it is sensitive to pressure, so using MIDI you can get a better sound.
I owned a Casio back in the 80s! And yes, it is a toy. But a really great toy. Mostly I used the midi connection to play my Roland Sound Canvas synth. The built in tones are useless. Thanks for the comparison. Loved the black ruby Cannonball look and sound.
Wooden sax really does have a tinge of clarinet to it. Very cool to hear that. Thank you for sharing.
That curved sopranino sounded beautiful!
Great vid, gents! I’m not a great sax player, but have been a massive fan for decades. Cheers from California. And hey, side note: if it doesn’t already exist, I propose November 6th as “International Saxophone Day”, in honor of the b-day of inventor Adolph Sax!
Have a straight alto myself (toneking). Really like Roland Kirk playing it (as well as the saxello) I can understand him using it, as the balance of the straight sax is easier if you play it one handed (along with other saxes as he is doing)
All were amazing, plus we got a little bit of history. Loved the wooden saxophone. It was my favorite, thank you. Great video 👍 cheers from America 🇺🇸 🍻
I also started with a Casio dh100. Had to repair the electronics and replace the internal breath tube with something (don’t remember what). I still have it and it still works.
Grafton Acrylic and the straight alto!
The woodie sounded great, as did the straight sax.
The wooden one sounded constipated. The Grafton sounded fine, though, and the Straight Alto. But I think my favorite, soundwise, is the Dragonball. Depends on it use, though, and sometimes I would probably prefer the Grafton for its softer sound.
There’s a brilliant video somewhere of Peter King playing Charlie Parker’s Grafton - very inspiring.
It's my first time to see a plastic saxophone that sounds so good! I also like the mild sound of the wooden one👍
I've got a Cannonball and I agree! The sound cuts through and it's still smooth! I'm still shopping for a good mouthpiece to make it sing more. The metal Jody Jazz I have is good but I know this horn can blow! I'm thinking a rubber mouthpiece might be better for it. Thanks for the review of these different saxes! If I ever see a wooden sax, I wanna play it! 😄
I like the Dukoff mouthpieces, it cuts through and has a crisp and sharp sound. Check out my latest short, I used it.
@@nathan_found_it_interesting will do!
I fell in love with that see-through sax!
Thanks for the last comparison!
The plastic one reminded me of the plastic recorders that we all have from elementary school music classes 😂.
I have a Conn C-melody saxophone. still works well 1923, never out of family...
That Cannonball sound is really rich, especially for an alto.
I think the midi sax and the mini sax both actually sound really cool.
the plasic one really has something nice to it. i really enjoyed that
I love that you gentlemen use the neck straps. They were shunned in my music classes because our teacher wanted us to develop good arm strength. Which is important sure, but so is not letting a 13 year old drop a $2000 dollar (beginner) instrument. Its not like they're adjustable or anything😅
Personally, I play another woodwind, B flat clarinet, but I still use a neck strap because my instrument is precious to me. Accidents can happen you know...
Hearing a saxophone that sounds so much like it was made in midi is really surreal.
🤣🤣 I still have two of the Casio horns, I used them to control samplers in the 80’s and even in a silver bucket headed robot band! 🤖 I have several of the black mouthpieces and the fingering is based on Recorder.
The straight alto is a delight!
The Grafton has that retro futuristic vibe. Like it should be in a Cowboy Bebop episode.
Gotta say, of all the strange horns in this video, Grafton sounds the best by far.
This was fun! Thank you for sharing.
The Cannonball is honey. Though I have not listened how the rest sound, I am sure this CB is going to be my pick.
I found the Cannonball the nicest sounding one of them all, but the first one, the cream colored one, would have been my second choice. But the cannonball was by far, the best sounding one. The wooden one would have been much better if it wasn't made to be a display, if it was made to actually be an instrument, I bet it would have sounded excellent. I used to play the bassoon, and went to the clarinet, and I came across a rosewood Clarinet out of China and although it was made in China it sounded so beautiful and rich, but I was in a place in my life where I couldn't afford the $900 it cost to buy it, and later I stopped playing altogether because of illness. I wish I could still play wind instruments, but those days are gone.
wow
the cannon ball gets me
and the acrylic sounds nice
As someone who had his first (scarring) experience with free jazz this week I am in no way surprised that Ornette Coleman played on a plastic saxophone.
I think I have to go with the straight alto, it has a very special timbre, and I like it.
Not a sax player myself, bassoonist, though the family intrigues and maybe I should try it some day.
I like the wooden sax tone
A hybrid brass sax with standard keys and ligature, but with a wooden bell, bow, and mouthpeice would retain that nice slightly dampened breathy sound while staying as reliable as a regular instrument. No more burying it in silica to travel with it.
I have a Cannonball Big Bell Stone Series Raven alto. It's a beautiful horn and has served me well.
The black plastic one sounded like a hybrid between an alto sax and an abs clarinet.
10:57
The curved sopranino is so small and cute. Baby saxo! :D
Now that's what I call a woodwind!
I wasn't sure what you meant about the second plastic sax until I heard it... somehow it sounds like a VST "sax" played with a keyboard!
the wooden one is a literal woodwind
I love the tone of the wooden one. I wonder if there are more playable models available?
On the contrary, for a straight alto I would mic it in the middle, the same as for a soprano sax or clarinet. And if I had a second mic, I would put it below the bell. Most of the sound comes out *last open hole* not the end of the bell. On a curved alto or tenor, it just so happens that the bell and the middle of the horn are in the same spot, which is great for mic'ing. However, as you can hear in this recording, the straight alto recording sounds very hollow, apart from the notes like middle D which have more of the holes closed, because the mic is too far away from where the sound is originating for most notes. Of course you'll lose the "full honk" sound for low B and Bb, but that's a better compromise than mic'ing a straight woodwind and at the bell and losing the midrange.
The captions for the straight alto when played say ha ha ha ha ha 💀
Well, hard to say for sure by a video, but for me the red-dragon and the straight one, had the best sounds.
The saxophone is my favorite instrument and I would love to have a whole collection of them
06:55 I NEED TO KNOW THE MUSIC FOR THE STRAIGHT ALTO B-ROLL INTRO OMD!!!
Thank you guys! very nice to see and to listen also! 👂👂 I was surprised at the end of the video how the plastic Sax was sounded like the Baritone at most time 😳 But obviously the Baritone smoother at the end. The sound I most liked was the wooden Sax. May if the mecanics were by metal insteed of wood will resolve many problems. Tuning with this wood mecanic will be really a mass. Great Job!
In our country, Japan, we express it like this、、Kawaii! 13:21
The cannonball was my favorite saxophone....second place grafton
Lennie Tristano invented Free Jazz, his first recordings of this kind of Jazz were in 1949, Coleman seems to often get the credit, i guess mainly because he used the term Free Jazz for his LP, which then got used as the name of this genre, i don't think they were calling it Free Jazz in 1949 Loved hearing the wooden saxophone btw, great video
Gentlemen! Allegheny Moon is a wonderful test song! And it is not utilized often enough in any capacity.
Cannonball: great looking great sounding .! 🎶💕
I played L.A. Sax's straight alto when they first came out. The tone was different from playing on a hard floor or a carpeted floor. I would have loved to hear, from the audience seats, what it sounded like played in an orchestra pit. I spoke with the designer, and I apologize for not remembering his name, but he said it was not just a matter of scabbing in a straight section between the main body and bell section. The low B and Bb tone holes had to be moved a bit. Everything from low D on down had to be redesigned.
As someone who plays a cannonball, it sure is a wonderful instrument
The grafton sounds the smoothest
The Grafton sounds fantastic. I never realized it was acrylic. The wood and the plastic sound significantly inferior in their own ways with either loud action or valve vibration. Unique, but I wouldn't actually want to listen to a whole piece on one. Thanks for presenting them all.