I don't own a Yorkbrunner, though my Holton is similar in concept. But my reason for responding is to repeat some words passed to me by Mike Sanders perhaps a year or two after starting to play his Yorkbrunner with the San Antonio Symphony.Kenneth wrote:Although I played it for only 30 minutes or so, I had impression that the way of playing the horn should be different.
Mike said that the thing he had to learn with the YB was to relax and let the horn do the work. He had played an Alexander, which he sais could do anything, but it was up to the player to make it happen. He suggested that the Yorkbrunner did not respond to that sort of direction, and that it didn't need it. He added that it took him nearly a year to get used to that aspect of playing the Yorkbrunner.
Much later, he had the opportunity to play his old Alex again, this time with St. Louis in Powell Hall. He said that he abandoned it after ten minutes and went back to the Yorkbrunner. The reason he gave was that the experiment reminded him just how much work the Alex had been, and that the Yorkbrunner had a sound that worked better in Powell. But he added (partly as a joke) that he stopped the experiment because he was afraid the maestro would like the sound.
Try playing the low G 1-3. That's the standard fix for the flat third partial on Conn 20J's.
Rick "who compared a YB to his Holton two months ago, and, in that case at least, preferred the Holton" Denney
