Matthias Holle Trombones

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StevenHolloway
Posts: 440
Joined: May 01, 2018

by StevenHolloway »

Anyone have experience with these horns? I believe they are made in Germany. Supposedly high quality instruments, but I've never played one.
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Neo_Bri
Posts: 1342
Joined: Mar 21, 2018

by Neo_Bri »

I don't know them and am curious, too.
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shider
Posts: 69
Joined: Apr 30, 2018

by shider »

Never heard of them, but if you want to find them on the internet, try searching for Hölle (or Hoelle) instead of Holle. They have a website: hoelle-posaunen.de which is only available in german..

Surprisingly for me: the workshop seems to be within 100km range of where i live, so i might check it out in the distant future if i might be in search of a new trombone. I like the name very much, "Hölle" in german means "hell", as in purgatory etc.. Nice name for trombones if you ask me.

They seem to produce mainly by hand, but including CNC machinery in their workshop and they advertise a rotary valve they have designed, though without specifics of what is different with it. They also seem to produce a lot of tuning slides as aftermarket products for different brands.

Noah Gladstone's Brass Ark is linked as a vendor for the brand though, so maybe he could give you some first hand information.

I hope i could help! If you want specific translations of their website, i'll be glad to help.

Greetings,

shider
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SwissTbone
Posts: 1138
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by SwissTbone » (edited 2018-08-29 9:42 a.m.)

It is quite impressive how many small trombone makers are in Germany, Switzerland and Austria. Here is a little liste (incomplete and not up to date, but still...)

Kromat

http://www.hans-kromat.de/

Lätsch

http://www.laetzsch-brass.de

Thein

http://www.thein-brass.de

Dotzauer

http://www.musik-dotzauer.de

Gopp

http://www.josefgopp.de

Hölle

http://www.hoelle-trombones.com

Miraphon

http://www.miraphone.de

Worischek

http://www.worischek.de

Anton

http://www.meister-anton.de

Finke

http://www.finkehorns.de

Schmelzer

http://www.schmelzertrombone.de

B&S Kollektiv

http://www.ja-musik.com

Jahn - B

http://www.der-blechblaeser.de

Kruspe

http://www.edkruspe.de

Kühnl&Hoyer

http://www.kuehnl-hoyer.de

Hermann Schmidt

http://www.hsm-brass.de/

H. Voigt

http://www.helmut-voigt.de

J.Voigt

http://www.voigt-brass.com

Schagerl - AU

http://www.schagerl.at

Lechner - AU

http://www.musik-lechner.com/

Haagstone - AU

http://www.haagston.at/

Haag - CH

http://www.musikhaag.ch

Willson - CH

http://www.swissprofi.ch/willson

Egger - CH

http://www.eggerinstruments.ch

Inderbinen -CH

http://www.inderbinen.com

If you like trombones, and have some money to spend, I suggest taking a vacation in Germany :-)
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BGuttman
Posts: 7368
Joined: Mar 22, 2018

by BGuttman »

If you visit Inderbinen, take a LOT of money. I teased one TTF member about his Inderbinen. He loved the horn, but had to give it up because it was heavy.

Some of those shops don't make "American" style trombones; only German style. There is a difference. German style trombones tend to have small dual bore slides with large bells. It means you may have a problem blending with a section of non-German trombones if you show up with one.
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Fidbone
Posts: 383
Joined: Apr 24, 2018

by Fidbone »

[quote="BGuttman"]If you visit Inderbinen, take a LOT of money. I teased one TTF member about his Inderbinen. He loved the horn, but had to give it up because it was heavy.

[/quote]

How childish ........ :eek:
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SwissTbone
Posts: 1138
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by SwissTbone »

[quote="BGuttman"]If you visit Inderbinen, take a LOT of money. I teased one TTF member about his Inderbinen. He loved the horn, but had to give it up because it was heavy.

Some of those shops don't make "American" style trombones; only German style. There is a difference. German style trombones tend to have small dual bore slides with large bells. It means you may have a problem blending with a section of non-German trombones if you show up with one.[/quote]

Most German makers also make american trombones now. German style trombones are rarely used even in Germany. Yes there are still some orchestras using exclusively German style trombones, but they are far in the minority. And I actually don't know a single trombonist using exclusively a German style trombone.
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whitbey
Posts: 654
Joined: Mar 23, 2018

by whitbey »

I always thought you could make a German style trombone by putting your duobore jazz slide on your bass bone with ducktape.
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LeTromboniste
Posts: 1634
Joined: Apr 11, 2018

by LeTromboniste »

[quote="shider"]

They seem to produce mainly by hand, but including CNC machinery in their workshop and they advertise a rotary valve they have designed, though without specifics of what is different with it. They also seem to produce a lot of tuning slides as aftermarket products for different brands.[/quote]

Their valve is a traditional rotor, the main difference I think is that more of it is handmade (or so they say). Design-wise, they use longer valve "ears" with usually slower bends and better approach angles to minimize tight bends going into the valve.

Their aftermarket tuning slides seem interesting. IIRC they are one piece bows instead of having the legs be two separate tubes. They are made of rolled sheet brass rather than preformed industrial brass tubes.