P@rick wrote:Does anyone here have experience with wooden mouthpieces?
Funny you should ask ...
Here are a couple of pictures of mine:
I bought it about 5 years ago from a euphonium player who had been one of the alphorn players at the Salt Lake City Olympics, and who drove from Utah to Kalamazoo to play in our TubaChristmas (he'd intended to fly, but the weather there was so bad they closed the airport, so he got in his car and drove instead ).
The outer diameter is about 2", the inner diameter about 1.15", and the cup depth around 1.75". I was told it's made of rosewood, and several woodwind players who have seen it thought that also.
The wood makes it a good extreme-temperature mouthpiece -- I've used it for outdoor performances from below freezing to 100 degrees (you'd think it would crack, but it hasn't thus far). Maintenance consists of oiling it about once a year, similar to a clarinet or oboe. It seems to damp out the upper harmonics, leaving a mellow sound, and I have used it in concerts when that sound was appropriate.
"Don't take life so serious, son. It ain't nohow permanent." -- Pogo (via Walt Kelly)