Lots and lots of players are using tenor mouthpieces with much larger inner diameters than the proverbial 5G -- there may be less of a conservative majority than you think. This shouldn't be news to anyone.Trombo wrote: ↑Sat Jan 07, 2023 12:19 amA hundred years have not yet passed.
But Joe Alessi for example uses a dual bore .547/562 and a 2g size mouthpiece. Two of the world's greatest symphonic players play such big equipment with great results. The conservative majority has something to think about.
Off the top of my head, most of my colleagues are on something between a Doug Elliott 103 and 106 sized rim, and either the F or G shaped cup on large tenor. Very very reasonable equipment these days. Every time I go to a trombone convention it seems like every tenor artist is playing some version of the Alessi Griego mouthpiece, which also fits that range.
The reason for this is mostly because these mouthpieces are now available, and people can try a lot of stuff these days. It's NOT because going bigger is innately better. Don't forget that Christian Lindberg, Alain Trudel, Michel Bequet, Jorgan Van Rijen, and so many other amazing artists play on smaller mouthpieces. It's like debating shoe sizes in the NFL -- nothing to do with their ability to shoot.
I'm sure when Joe made his first wide piece in the 80s or 90s or whatever, it was the result of a ton of experiments with someone who had a lathe, and it took a lot of money. Same with Denis Wick and Jay. You didn't just get a shallow 3G by default, because with the way things used to be manufactured it didn't make financial sense. You had like 2 blanks, and there was only do much you could do with it. So nobody tried anything other than what was available unless they were crazy. Now with CNC lathes and accurate tools, you can press a button and the craziest design you can dream up pops out of the machine. It's about $250 for a completely custom, plated mouthpiece, from a few shops around the world. Do you realize how crazy that is compared to even 10 years ago?
Like Doug says, it just happens to be that whatever the most common embouchure type is seems to be able to handle more width in the cup. The guys in mouthpiece design must've been trumpeters, back in the day, so we got hosed until the 90s, and the top players coincidentally were blessed with embouchures predisposed to 6.5ALs and 5Gs.