Mt vernon 15c
- Elow
- Posts: 1924
- Joined: Mar 02, 2020
Found this in a rental king 606 case and replaced it with one of my bach 6 1/2 AL’s. What’s this good for or should i just replate and sell?
- FOSSIL
- Posts: 688
- Joined: Jul 09, 2019
Someone will have taken the original King mouthpiece and replaced it with the MV 15c.... because nobody uses a 15c MV or not. Stick it on your face and think if you want to use it.... don't get it plated, you will never see your money back. I'll trade you for a 61/2AL...not because I want a 15c...just because my 6 1/2AL is pants.
See how it works ?
Chris
See how it works ?
Chris
- WilliamLang
- Posts: 636
- Joined: Nov 22, 2019
it might be a very nice option for an alto mouthpiece. i would be willing to buy it and find out
- Elow
- Posts: 1924
- Joined: Mar 02, 2020
[quote="FOSSIL"]Someone will have taken the original King mouthpiece and replaced it with the MV 15c.... because nobody uses a 15c MV or not. Stick it on your face and think if you want to use it.... don't get it plated, you will never see your money back. I'll trade you for a 61/2AL...not because I want a 15c...just because my 6 1/2AL is pants.
See how it works ?
Chris[/quote]
Got it, ive heard of people using them on bass trumpets so i guess i’ll hold on to it until i get a bass trumpet.
See how it works ?
Chris[/quote]
Got it, ive heard of people using them on bass trumpets so i guess i’ll hold on to it until i get a bass trumpet.
- Posaunus
- Posts: 5018
- Joined: Mar 23, 2018
From the Bach mouthpiece manual:
Model .. Depth ... Approx. .... Rim ........ Description
No. ..... of Cup ...Cup Dia .... Shape ......
15C ... Medium .. 24.40 mm . Med wide .. Medium shallow cup produces a clear, lively tone.
............................................... Players with shallow thin lips or weak embouchures will find it helpful.
This is very small for a modern trombone mouthpiece, and hardly used these days.
Model .. Depth ... Approx. .... Rim ........ Description
No. ..... of Cup ...Cup Dia .... Shape ......
15C ... Medium .. 24.40 mm . Med wide .. Medium shallow cup produces a clear, lively tone.
............................................... Players with shallow thin lips or weak embouchures will find it helpful.
This is very small for a modern trombone mouthpiece, and hardly used these days.
- FOSSIL
- Posts: 688
- Joined: Jul 09, 2019
[quote="Elow"]<QUOTE author="FOSSIL" post_id="116922" time="1592500777" user_id="7109">
Someone will have taken the original King mouthpiece and replaced it with the MV 15c.... because nobody uses a 15c MV or not. Stick it on your face and think if you want to use it.... don't get it plated, you will never see your money back. I'll trade you for a 61/2AL...not because I want a 15c...just because my 6 1/2AL is pants.
See how it works ?
Chris[/quote]
Got it, ive heard of people using them on bass trumpets so i guess i’ll hold on to it until i get a bass trumpet.
</QUOTE>
I've got a bass trumpet... and a New York 15....they don't really jive together. The 15 has an odd rim... quite flat and thin. It has a nice sound...very compact and quite dark. The 15c will be brighter. They are really small.
Chris
Someone will have taken the original King mouthpiece and replaced it with the MV 15c.... because nobody uses a 15c MV or not. Stick it on your face and think if you want to use it.... don't get it plated, you will never see your money back. I'll trade you for a 61/2AL...not because I want a 15c...just because my 6 1/2AL is pants.
See how it works ?
Chris[/quote]
Got it, ive heard of people using them on bass trumpets so i guess i’ll hold on to it until i get a bass trumpet.
</QUOTE>
I've got a bass trumpet... and a New York 15....they don't really jive together. The 15 has an odd rim... quite flat and thin. It has a nice sound...very compact and quite dark. The 15c will be brighter. They are really small.
Chris
- FOSSIL
- Posts: 688
- Joined: Jul 09, 2019
Elow, you are at the start of a long journey which many of us have been on before you...every journey is unique...and fun. Enjoy learning and growing.
Chris
Chris
- timothy42b
- Posts: 1812
- Joined: Mar 27, 2018
I brought a 15C to ATW one year and tried it on altos. Some that had squirrelly intonation on what I'd been using played much better on that 15C.
- paulyg
- Posts: 689
- Joined: May 17, 2018
"Players with shallow thin lips or weak embouchures will find it helpful."
Wow.... talk about being your own worst critics, Bach!
I have a NY 15A that works amazingly with my alto. I now use a different piece, since the alto wants a much more gentle backbore for intonation, but the sound is incredible. Also, FWIW, I have thick lips and (used to have) a very strong embouchure, and the 15 rim was more taxing to play than a larger rim (12/12C). It just gave me a more penetrating, focused sound on the instrument, with kind of a velvet wrapping.
Wow.... talk about being your own worst critics, Bach!
I have a NY 15A that works amazingly with my alto. I now use a different piece, since the alto wants a much more gentle backbore for intonation, but the sound is incredible. Also, FWIW, I have thick lips and (used to have) a very strong embouchure, and the 15 rim was more taxing to play than a larger rim (12/12C). It just gave me a more penetrating, focused sound on the instrument, with kind of a velvet wrapping.
- PhilGray
- Posts: 2
- Joined: Jun 26, 2020
I never know if a new piece works until I've played it for a few months or a year. I tried a 15 Bach once after I hadn't played for a couple of years and It felt great right away, I was hitting high F's with 0 chops. I doubt low notes would be warm enough tho. The owner was a trumpet player who doubled on bone on the same gig, so he wanted a diameter that was closer to his trumpet piece. I''m curious how a 15c would work with a bass trumpet, or a soprano bone.