terrible trombones????bluemusic1 wrote:A friend of mine is trying to sell his Benge trumpet that he has had for a long time. It was made, I believe, back in the late 60's and just wanted to get some feedback on whether it was worthless or not. I know Benge made terrible trombones but I dont know much about their trumpets.
Actually the Benge trumpets made then were made by the original Benge company. Sorry, I can't tell you much about them.
Eventually, UMI bought Benge out. Later when UMI designed the Benge trombones in the 80's, they patterned them largely after Kings. Since UMI already owned the rights to the Benge name they simply used the name for their new line of bones. There is no conncection to the original Benge company other than the name.
UMI designed the horns as Kings to market to the classical players. Kings have such a tradition in the jazz market they figured that classical players wouldn't buy Kings. Hence the use of the Benge name, which had a pretty good reputation in the classical genre.
Actually I own three of them (190C, 175F and 290 bass)and enjoy their tone. Much more reponsive than Bachs but a little more core than Conns due to annealed bells. They sort of split the difference. They also use oversized rotor sections (this was the days before thayer valves were public domain) and blow incredibly free and open.
I know I did not really answer your trumpet question but just felt I had to address the terrible trombone comment.
ken k





