Doc wrote:iiipopes wrote:
If a serious player, even a half-assed serious player, lets the very best horn go by because of thumb ring, valve angle, or doesn't-sit-right-on-my-lap (get a stand, you f*cking moron), then you don't have any business spending THOUSANDS of dollars on anything, except for some additional brain cells (good luck on THAT purchase).
Another thing that pegs people as non-thinkers is the fact that they will spend THOUSANDS of dollars on an instrument, but bitch because they don't want to spend the dough for a quality case or bag. If you can't afford the extra few hundred bucks (read: too chickenshit to protect your enormous investment), you have no business getting the horn in the first place. Don't have the dough to check out a few mouthpieces? Then you haven't saved enough. People are short-sighted. They can't see past the instrument.
Doc
All of this i understandable, but seriously....
Sometimes we are on a budget...in fact most of the time we are all on budgets. And I am NOT willing to get a horn that is not as nice just so I can afford a certain case or mouthpiece or custom work. If the case you refer to is someone being cheap, then I agree. And I am not exactly sure where this rant came from anyway, since noone here was really COMPLAINING. I was sincerely giving my 2 cents on something. And for some people, valve angles and etc. are important, because they can't afford 'tweaking' after spending $8000. You're right...sometime it's because we didn't save enough, but in many cases we can't wait that extra time.
Especially your comment "if you can't afford a few extra hundred bucks then you have no business getting the horn in the first place".
How shortsighted of you! I know your intentions are good, but would you settle for an instrument that is below par to the one you want just because of price? I would rather wait on a case and be extra careful, or not tweak the horn, than get a lesser horn so I can afford some of these things.
The original poster was asking a genuine question, and I was answering based off of the information he gave. If you want a horn that requires little of no "tweaking" right out of the store, then you have to make certain choices.
Your post was slightly negative and I don't know exactly who it was directed to. Maybe not me, but maybe it was me. All I know is that noone in this post was "bitching". So why are you "bitching" about their "bitching"? Do what you want and have your thoughts, but c'mon.....
I let valve angles influence my horn choice because the "very best horn" includes this aspect. I CAN and HAVE found the very best horn for me (at the time and for the cash) that has a comfortable hand placement and etc. It required no tweaking. So in answer the the original post, it is possible and if you can do it, great.
(oh and just so you know, some STAND are not a viable replacement for it sitting funny on your lap. Because as we know, stands tend to allow the heavyness of a horn to pull it forward, and this can cause leaning which is just as uncomfortable to the problem.)
So in other words, don't make assumption or get angry about other people's choices or questions or suggestions. To every man his own way. You don't see me complaining about people paying $12,000 for a horn, then spending 1200 for work done on it, then just selling it a year later because it's not what they "want/need at the moment".
So in response to the original post....
Buy the horn that is best for you overall. Whether hand comfort is part of the decision, your choice. Tweaking is an option.....but of course, it costs money. If you can get a horn that you want to tweak down the road...just make sure it's relatively comfortable in the mean time. No need to get a hand injury.