Mouthpieces!
- Benjamin
- bugler

- Posts: 100
- Joined: Sun Feb 27, 2005 7:49 pm
- Location: Dublin VA
- Contact:
- artuba
- bugler

- Posts: 93
- Joined: Sun Jul 24, 2005 6:50 pm
- Location: Russellville, Arkansas
- Contact:
I play a PT-36 and a Conn Helleburg for tuba and a Blessing 6 1/2 AL when I play euphonium. I don't feel the need for a super good name brand euphonium mouthpiece when I don't normally play euphonium. I'm just a backup when people don't show.
Matt Simpson
Phi Mu Alpha - Kappa Eta Chapter
Bluecoats Contra- '07 '08 '09
Arkansas Tech Tuba/Euph Ensemble
"There are two kinds of tuba songs: love songs, and pirate songs." - Roger Bobo
Phi Mu Alpha - Kappa Eta Chapter
Bluecoats Contra- '07 '08 '09
Arkansas Tech Tuba/Euph Ensemble
"There are two kinds of tuba songs: love songs, and pirate songs." - Roger Bobo
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Bob Mosso
- bugler

- Posts: 211
- Joined: Wed Jan 12, 2005 2:01 pm
- Location: southern California
- Contact:
For a Yamaha 321 euph I use:
Denis Wick SM4B for practicing at home. I like the sound with this one the best (smooth and dark) but I tend to mis-articulate with it. I'll continue working with this one till I can master it.
Yamaha 51D, used for rehearsals and performances. Similar in sound to the the SM4B but a little airy (in comparison), no problems with articulations.
I recently pulled the Yamaha 48 out to play some jazz with my son, the 51D seemed a bit dark for the style music we were playing.
Denis Wick SM4B for practicing at home. I like the sound with this one the best (smooth and dark) but I tend to mis-articulate with it. I'll continue working with this one till I can master it.
Yamaha 51D, used for rehearsals and performances. Similar in sound to the the SM4B but a little airy (in comparison), no problems with articulations.
I recently pulled the Yamaha 48 out to play some jazz with my son, the 51D seemed a bit dark for the style music we were playing.
- SplatterTone
- 5 valves

- Posts: 1906
- Joined: Fri Jul 15, 2005 11:17 pm
- Location: Tulsa, OK
- Contact:
No exotic mouthpieces for me.
On VMI 3171 euph: Yamaha 51C4. The Schilke 51D seems to be popular, but I like the brighter, more forward sound of the 51C4.
On 4/4 tuba: Faxx 24AW for general use. Yamaha 66D4 if I need to back off and play quietly. Kelly 18 if I want to crank the puppy up. I intend to get a Bach of Faxx 18 one of these days "when I get around to it".
The 3/4 tuba seems to do well with the 66D4.
On VMI 3171 euph: Yamaha 51C4. The Schilke 51D seems to be popular, but I like the brighter, more forward sound of the 51C4.
On 4/4 tuba: Faxx 24AW for general use. Yamaha 66D4 if I need to back off and play quietly. Kelly 18 if I want to crank the puppy up. I intend to get a Bach of Faxx 18 one of these days "when I get around to it".
The 3/4 tuba seems to do well with the 66D4.
Good signature lines: http://tinyurl.com/a47spm
- iiipopes
- Utility Infielder

- Posts: 8580
- Joined: Tue Sep 06, 2005 1:10 am
On my Conn sousaphone I use a Kelly 18, as most of the gigs are outdoors. But it turned out to be such a fine mouthpiece and a perfect fit to the sousaphone that I use it for everything. The only thing I did to it was to wrap a 1/2 inch wide strip of golfer's lead tape around the shank where it meets the cup to help the centering at louder dynamics. This tamed the little bit of fraying I sensed without it. Everyone should have a Kelly mouthpiece in their lineup, as you never know when the gigs or the horn require it. The lexan is easy on the lips, and their version of a Bach 18 is a little deeper, which improves the range of tone greatly, while retaining all of the overtones to help the sousaphone get that good "grit in the gizzard" tone for projection without becoming harsh. On the other hand, I can tone down and make my souzy sound very tuba-ish indoors and blend very well.
I use a Wick 1 on my 1971 Besson BBb 3-valve comp. A vastly underrated mouthpiece. The rim is like the Wick 2, only 1/100 of an inch narrower due to it being on the same blank, and almost identical to my Kelly 18 that I use on my Conn sousaphone. The rim is Bach-ish, if maybe slightly more curved. The cup is a deep Helleburg style cup, if maybe slightly more rounded at the bottom before going into the throat, which is the same as the Wick 2 and my Kelly 18.
The difference between the Wick 2 and the Wick 1 for me is the difference between driving my Chevy Aveo (Kalos in Europe) and my Jaguar E-type. Like my Aveo, the Wick 2 got me where I needed to be directly, concisely, and with stability, but without any flash, and no high performance, either in dynamics or range. The Wick 1, on the other hand, is somewhat of a difficult piece to drive, but oh, does it drive. Range is consistant from top to bottom, low notes are smoother from the longer stroke, er, deeper cup, while high notes actually center better, dynamic shading and inflection on intonation are available, and the statement in the brochure description about needing a well developed embouchure is almost an understatement. But when you need to rev it up, it goes right with you. You can take your turn through a phrase straight in and on, take a high groove lightly and hold the suspension set with slight understeer, or dive an apex and come out with throttle oversteer, and if you need full on 4-wheel drift it delivers in spades. No, it is not an easy or cushy mouthpiece, like a Bach 24AW can be, but it is THE perfect match to a 3-valve Besson BBb comp (As it should be, seeing it was designed for it!). I can see why on the 4-valve comps a Perantucci or similar is preferred, especially if you need the more substantial torque grunt of a true bottom dweller, but that is not my personal style, either. Since it is a more difficult mouthpiece, focus on precise slurs and intonation is a must until it becomes second nature, similar to navigating my double gated synchro 4-speed transmission and clutch - a missed shift results in a whopping crackup!
With the rim almost perfectly identical to my Kelly 18, both in size and profile, transition between my Besson and my pickup-character sousaphone is almost seamless, and both will now benefit from playing the other.
Ladies and Gentlemen, start your engines!
I use a Wick 1 on my 1971 Besson BBb 3-valve comp. A vastly underrated mouthpiece. The rim is like the Wick 2, only 1/100 of an inch narrower due to it being on the same blank, and almost identical to my Kelly 18 that I use on my Conn sousaphone. The rim is Bach-ish, if maybe slightly more curved. The cup is a deep Helleburg style cup, if maybe slightly more rounded at the bottom before going into the throat, which is the same as the Wick 2 and my Kelly 18.
The difference between the Wick 2 and the Wick 1 for me is the difference between driving my Chevy Aveo (Kalos in Europe) and my Jaguar E-type. Like my Aveo, the Wick 2 got me where I needed to be directly, concisely, and with stability, but without any flash, and no high performance, either in dynamics or range. The Wick 1, on the other hand, is somewhat of a difficult piece to drive, but oh, does it drive. Range is consistant from top to bottom, low notes are smoother from the longer stroke, er, deeper cup, while high notes actually center better, dynamic shading and inflection on intonation are available, and the statement in the brochure description about needing a well developed embouchure is almost an understatement. But when you need to rev it up, it goes right with you. You can take your turn through a phrase straight in and on, take a high groove lightly and hold the suspension set with slight understeer, or dive an apex and come out with throttle oversteer, and if you need full on 4-wheel drift it delivers in spades. No, it is not an easy or cushy mouthpiece, like a Bach 24AW can be, but it is THE perfect match to a 3-valve Besson BBb comp (As it should be, seeing it was designed for it!). I can see why on the 4-valve comps a Perantucci or similar is preferred, especially if you need the more substantial torque grunt of a true bottom dweller, but that is not my personal style, either. Since it is a more difficult mouthpiece, focus on precise slurs and intonation is a must until it becomes second nature, similar to navigating my double gated synchro 4-speed transmission and clutch - a missed shift results in a whopping crackup!
With the rim almost perfectly identical to my Kelly 18, both in size and profile, transition between my Besson and my pickup-character sousaphone is almost seamless, and both will now benefit from playing the other.
Ladies and Gentlemen, start your engines!
Jupiter JTU1110
"Real" Conn 36K
"Real" Conn 36K
- ufoneum
- 3 valves

- Posts: 385
- Joined: Fri Feb 04, 2005 7:58 pm
- Location: Evansville, IN
I use a Wick SM3. I like the feel of the rim. I, like most, was brought up on the 51D, which is a fine mouthpiece. To my taste, it seemed a bit limiting on what I could do with it - the SM3 is huge though, not for everyone. If you find the 3 a bit large, try the 3.5 or the 4 - this entire line of mouthpieces are just absolutely wonderful.
- Pat Stuckemeyer
- Pat Stuckemeyer
Assistant Prof. of Music - Kentucky Wesleyan College (Owensboro, KY)
Buffet Crampon and Besson Performing Artist
Conductor, River Brass Band (Evansville, IN)
Treasurer, International Tuba Euphonium Association
facebook.com/stuckemeyer
patstuckemeyer.com
Buffet Crampon and Besson Performing Artist
Conductor, River Brass Band (Evansville, IN)
Treasurer, International Tuba Euphonium Association
facebook.com/stuckemeyer
patstuckemeyer.com
- Teubonium
- 3 valves

- Posts: 367
- Joined: Sat Mar 20, 2004 3:07 pm
- Location: Colorado
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David
- bugler

- Posts: 111
- Joined: Sun Sep 12, 2004 7:26 pm
- Location: Canada
Yep
My teacher tells me its bad, but I play most of the time on Reynolds 'Dr.Young' model mouthpiece. It basically looks like a very large french horn mouthpiece. No tapered backbore. Just a straight pipe. I just love it to death....
What one man can do another can do
- Tubaryan12
- 6 valves

- Posts: 2106
- Joined: Sat Nov 13, 2004 7:49 am
- MartyNeilan
- 6 valves

- Posts: 4876
- Joined: Fri Mar 19, 2004 3:06 am
- Location: Practicing counting rests.
Rotary F: Rudy Meinl RM-9 (8 mm backbore) and Floyd Cooley Helleberg
Big rotary CC: Warburton-Neilan (derived from a AJ mouthpiece with a C4 rim and a heavyweight profile) and G&W Alan Baer stainless
Bass Bone: Griego .75
My (wife influenced) philosophy on mouthpieces - if it is not used regularly, sell it. No practical need to have more than a couple mouthpieces per horn.
Looks funny but sounds great:

Big rotary CC: Warburton-Neilan (derived from a AJ mouthpiece with a C4 rim and a heavyweight profile) and G&W Alan Baer stainless
Bass Bone: Griego .75
My (wife influenced) philosophy on mouthpieces - if it is not used regularly, sell it. No practical need to have more than a couple mouthpieces per horn.
Looks funny but sounds great:

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Chriss2760
- bugler

- Posts: 177
- Joined: Mon Apr 25, 2005 3:03 pm
- Location: Leavenworth, Washington
Ooh... Good question, Euphba. But make sure you ask what type of music, what size group, what horn, etc...
As for me, I'm playing a Marcinkowicz N4 Jim Self (a bit tight on the bore,) a Perantucci PT88 (nice big bore, nice deep, round cup, but the rim is too round,) and the Canadian Brass YAC BBCB-REP. This one is good, but maybe a bit too small in the rim diameter department. Close, though. My horns are a Miraphone 186 and a Yamaha 621, both in BBb. I play big German band, small polka band, brass quintet, and a lot of stuff that really doesn't fit in any category but maybe "contemporary/commercial." The round cup mp's give a good "german" sound, but are too slow in response for anything else. Paul Sidey has just introduced a new mouthpiece that may be just the ticket. Flat rim, sharp inner rim, open bore and ample diameter. We'll see....
Just my $.02 worth.
As for me, I'm playing a Marcinkowicz N4 Jim Self (a bit tight on the bore,) a Perantucci PT88 (nice big bore, nice deep, round cup, but the rim is too round,) and the Canadian Brass YAC BBCB-REP. This one is good, but maybe a bit too small in the rim diameter department. Close, though. My horns are a Miraphone 186 and a Yamaha 621, both in BBb. I play big German band, small polka band, brass quintet, and a lot of stuff that really doesn't fit in any category but maybe "contemporary/commercial." The round cup mp's give a good "german" sound, but are too slow in response for anything else. Paul Sidey has just introduced a new mouthpiece that may be just the ticket. Flat rim, sharp inner rim, open bore and ample diameter. We'll see....
Just my $.02 worth.
- Louis
- bugler

- Posts: 75
- Joined: Mon Jul 26, 2004 3:09 pm
- Location: Woodbridge, NJ USA
- Contact:
- Kevin Hendrick
- 6 valves

- Posts: 3156
- Joined: Sat Sep 25, 2004 10:51 pm
- Location: Location: Location
A bit -- the Jim Self Marc is the ETU1 (slightly smaller cup ID and larger throat diameter than the N4).Teubonium wrote:Chriss2760 wrote: As for me, I'm playing a Marcinkowicz N4 Jim Self
Is that different from a Marc N4 Tommy Johnson?
"Don't take life so serious, son. It ain't nohow permanent." -- Pogo (via Walt Kelly)
- SplatterTone
- 5 valves

- Posts: 1906
- Joined: Fri Jul 15, 2005 11:17 pm
- Location: Tulsa, OK
- Contact:
The last rehearsal, I got some stuff with a lot of "high" notes (high for me) up to middle c, and one piece with an 8th note octave leap that I could not do reliably. So, I finally gave up on trying to show how manly I could be by playing big-boy mouthpieces, went back to experimenting with a 25, Yamaha 65, and the old reliable 66D4. Voila! Things got a whole lot better: articulation, those "high" notes, the octave leap.
Another thing I've noticed is that if I play the big mouthpieces for too long, I start playing with too much tension all the time. Go back to the smaller mouthpieces, relax a little bit, and things start sounding better again even when I go back to the larger mouthpieces.
The moral of the story is to heed the advice of one of the 20th century's great philosophers: A man's got to know his limitations
- Harry Callaghan
Another thing I've noticed is that if I play the big mouthpieces for too long, I start playing with too much tension all the time. Go back to the smaller mouthpieces, relax a little bit, and things start sounding better again even when I go back to the larger mouthpieces.
The moral of the story is to heed the advice of one of the 20th century's great philosophers: A man's got to know his limitations
- Harry Callaghan
Good signature lines: http://tinyurl.com/a47spm