tubashaman wrote:Well, its definitely an American Mouthpiece. Seems to be a baritone/euphonium mouthpiece. Possibly a Schilke, Conn, or a very very early helleberg
tubashaman wrote:Well, its definitely an American Mouthpiece. Seems to be a baritone/euphonium mouthpiece. Possibly a Schilke, Conn, or a very very early helleberg
Looks exactly like my Melton #81. Internally and externally. Last time I checked, that wasn't made by an American company. Also, unless the OP has very tiny hands, that is more than likely a tuba mouthpiece.
A couple of years ago I bought a Dalyan Eb on EBay. It came with a mouthpiece that as I held it up to your first picture has the same configuration and lathe markings except the band around the middle of the cup which on the Dalyan are two parallel grooves 6mm apart. The Dalyan throat is also much wider. Neither the Dalyan mouthpiece and instrument have any identification logos which might give rise to your mouthpiece being of third world copy-someone-else's-product origin. It doesn't look like it came off a music store accessory shelf. Did you find it somewhere while on a Peace Corp trip?
Have fun.
Can't tell from the picture but if it has a shallow cup, it's probably of some European origin.
I have some early King, Conn and Buescher mouthpieces, they don't have the same "look" to them at all. I'd have to say that It doesn't look American to me but I'd have to see it in person to be sure.
City Intonation Inspector - Dallas Texas "Holding the Bordognian Fabric of the Universe together through better pitch, one note at a time."
Practicing results in increased atmospheric CO2 thus causing global warming.