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My Kind of Group!
Posted: Thu Aug 17, 2006 8:24 pm
by circusboy
From the Custom Music website:
Based on the PT-3, the PT-4 features a larger bell, conical bore, and more open wrap for easier blowing and larger sound. Perfect for a solo and small ensemble/lager ensemble crossover horn.
. . . . though I usually play in a Hefeweizen Septet, myself.
PT-4 means "four pints," right?
Re: My Kind of Group!
Posted: Thu Aug 17, 2006 8:34 pm
by Kevin Hendrick
circusboy wrote:From the Custom Music website:
Based on the PT-3, the PT-4 features a larger bell, conical bore, and more open wrap for easier blowing and larger sound. Perfect for a solo and small ensemble/lager ensemble crossover horn.
. . . . though I usually play in a Hefeweizen Septet, myself.
and then wrote:PT-4 means "four pints," right?
Well, yeah, for starters ... 
Posted: Thu Aug 17, 2006 11:12 pm
by iiipopes
Sounds like someone just qualified to be the next goof in a Bud Light commercial.
Think about it: what other industry besides brewing can actually get by with not only, "not being polite," but actively ridiculing their primary clientele, and in the case of the major brewers with national television advertising, and make more money doing it?
Now, just were IS that beer tuba picture?
Edit: correcting the tense to appease the Grammar Nazi.
Posted: Fri Aug 18, 2006 12:19 am
by drow2buh
I wish!
This Saturday I'll probably have a few pints.... okay maybe 8 or so! Yes! I hope the bar I'm going to has Franziskaner, I still haven't tried it... need to get around to that...
Now, just were IS that beer tuba picture?
Edit: correcting the tense to appease the Grammar Nazi.
Well at least you fixed ONE of the mistakes!
Posted: Fri Aug 18, 2006 12:44 am
by windshieldbug
iiipopes wrote:Now, just were IS that beer tuba picture?
<img src="
http://www.beerlabels.com/labels/full/0 ... -03144.jpg" width="400">
Posted: Fri Aug 18, 2006 11:41 am
by iiipopes
Yeah, I needed to have fixed the other one as well.
If you can't make it to Germany, this weekend is Erntefest in a little town called Freistatt in southwest Missouri, a smaller version of the same.