tubaguy wrote:I guess I'm just looking for a good match on my horn. Everyone says that, well since you play a big horn you need a smaller mp and since it's a piston you need this mp. I know that with the PT49 my upper range suffers a little, but everything else is fine. I thought about trying out a Laskey 30H, but I don't have the money for one now. Any advice will help.
Thanks
I'm a big fan of the 30H myself, and I think it's similar to a Conn Helleberg with a more comfortable rim and a little more effective shape through the throat. I find that it works quite well on big tubas in particular, but it's a good general-purpose mouthpiece.
The only reason I tried it is because someone I respect sent me a message suggesting that I should try it with my Holton. I didn't want to spend full price when I was already happy with my old mouthpiece, so I waited until a used one came up. I didn't have to wait too long. And I knew that if it didn't work I'd be able to sell it for what I spent (except that I never seem to be able to sell mouthpieces--though that is a different problem).
Of course, that doesn't mean a Laskey is the right mouthpiece for you.
Again, though, you have to describe what you don't like about your current mouthpieces. A mouthpiece that makes it hard to play in the upper register suggests to me that you've gone for size and volume to make a bigger low sound, and paid the price in terms of upper-range flexibility. Were I you, I'd wonder if I was trying to learn how to muscle the upper register on too large a mouthpiece, when I might be better served learning how to make a bigger, more efficient sound in the low register with a slightly smaller mouthpiece. That approach also helps avoid the woofiness in the lower register that is the death of clarity.
When I want a stronger, edgier sound than the Laskey provides, I use a PT-48 on the Holton. It's not smaller, but it is shallower and a bit more cup-shaped. I suspect the 49 and 50 are deeper and have a bigger volume, but that's just a guess.
Rick "who has given up too much in the past worshipping at the altar of loud" Denney