Hi Mike
I still have the adjustable cup MP that Mr Jacobs gave me and you unstuck. Guess what? It's stuck again!
This was made by Schilke and is probably based on a cup size from a Schilke 62 to a 66 or 67. It comes in handy finding the right mix of fundemental and overtones. I've used it in just one spot that I liked or adjusted it while playing, opening it up for a larger sound or closing it for more clarity especially in technical passages.
A great toy but getting one made these days costs a fortune.
Adjustable Cup mouthpieces
- brianf
- 4 valves

- Posts: 568
- Joined: Thu Mar 18, 2004 10:30 pm
Brian Frederiksen
WindSong Press
PO Box 146
Gurnee, Illinois 60031
Phone 847 223-4586
http://www.windsongpress.com" target="_blank
brianf@windsongpress.com" target="_blank
WindSong Press
PO Box 146
Gurnee, Illinois 60031
Phone 847 223-4586
http://www.windsongpress.com" target="_blank
brianf@windsongpress.com" target="_blank
-
wtuba
- pro musician

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- Location: Georgetown, TX
Adjustable Cup mouthpieces
I have that same KingRoss mouthpiece, and used it exclusively for many years. I think the 'piece was designed by Walter Sear; I bought mine from him a long time ago. I shifted to the Doug Elliott system a few years back, but the King Ross served me well.
- windshieldbug
- Once got the "hand" as a cue

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Re: Adjustable Cup mouthpieces
Paul KrzywickiMike Johnson wrote:Kirzwiki (sp!)
FWIW
- Art Hovey
- pro musician

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Walter Sear used to use an adjustable mpc similar to that one.
When I was very young somebody brought a spring-loaded adjustable bass trombone mpc to show my father. We tried it in my Eb tuba, but I couldn't make it work because I was using too much pressure at the time. I remember that he had removed half of the springs to make it more sensitive, and that he said he could not blow cigaratte smoke through the sliding part. (That seems to be a rather poor criterion, but he liked it.)
When I was very young somebody brought a spring-loaded adjustable bass trombone mpc to show my father. We tried it in my Eb tuba, but I couldn't make it work because I was using too much pressure at the time. I remember that he had removed half of the springs to make it more sensitive, and that he said he could not blow cigaratte smoke through the sliding part. (That seems to be a rather poor criterion, but he liked it.)
- Chuck(G)
- 6 valves

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