Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

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pipperz
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Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by pipperz »

I’m going to be purchasing a marching euphonium in the near future and I’ve been wondering what mouthpiece to get as I primarily play an f attachment large bore tenor. I’ve heard that the Schilke 51D is a pretty good mouthpiece for euph but AWFUL for trombone. Are there any other better euph mouthpieces that can be used for a large tenor or should I just stick with the Schilke 51D?
AtomicClock
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by AtomicClock »

What do you play on trombone now?
pipperz
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by pipperz »

Right now I’m using this unnamed large shank mouthpiece that came with the trombone I use from my school. I dont really know the exact measurements of it but it does have a pretty deep cup.
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spencercarran
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by spencercarran »

Euphonium and trombone are different instruments and using identical mouthpieces for both will entail some compromises. A better route might be to use two mouthpieces with similar rims but different cups/backbores. You might eg use the 51D for euph and a 51 (or 51B, or 51C4) for trombone.
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WilliamLang
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by WilliamLang »

I know that I'm definitely different for this, but I love euphonium style mouthpieces on trombone - I started on a Shillke 51D and it worked really well for me, and I've had my best success with pieces made for euphonium on tenor ever since. From anecdotal evidence though this is pretty rare, and a lot of people don't like deep mouthpieces on tenor.
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JohnL
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by JohnL »

Hard to make a recommendation when we don't know what you're currently using...

You're buying a marching euph to prepare to audition for a DCI corps, right? If you know know which corps you're going for, you might want to check to see if they specify a standard mouthpiece.
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by MTbassbone »

Doug Elliott's EUPH series might be a good choice.
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ghmerrill
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by ghmerrill »

A lot of people use some of the Wick "trombone" mouthpieces (Wick 3AL, 4AL, 5AL, etc.) on euph. I use a DE euph J cup mouthpiece with a fairly large (106) rim and (J6) shank.
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Doug Elliott
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by Doug Elliott »

A "marching euphonium" is not really a euphonium so I really wouldn't worry too much about trying to have a great euphonium mouthpiece.
First you need to know what shank size you need.
If it's large shank, just use your trombone mouthpiece until somebody has an opinion.
"I know a thing or two because I've seen a thing or two."
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Burgerbob
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by Burgerbob »

Doug Elliott wrote: Sun Nov 26, 2023 9:33 pm A "marching euphonium" is not really a euphonium so I really wouldn't worry too much about trying to have a great euphonium mouthpiece.
First you need to know what shank size you need.
If it's large shank, just use your trombone mouthpiece until somebody has an opinion.
Modern marching euphs are very much euphs, huge horns with .571 bores and 12 inch bells.
Aidan Ritchie, LA area player and teacher
Pezza
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by Pezza »

I hate the 51D in the euphonium.
I prefer the 2-3G ish sizes.
Wick 4AL/ SM4 are common for euphonium.
Am I a trombone player who plays euphonium, or a euphonium player who plays trombone? :idk:
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spencercarran
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by spencercarran »

Burgerbob wrote: Sun Nov 26, 2023 9:52 pm
Doug Elliott wrote: Sun Nov 26, 2023 9:33 pm A "marching euphonium" is not really a euphonium so I really wouldn't worry too much about trying to have a great euphonium mouthpiece.
First you need to know what shank size you need.
If it's large shank, just use your trombone mouthpiece until somebody has an opinion.
Modern marching euphs are very much euphs, huge horns with .571 bores and 12 inch bells.
Still a very different taper, and generally aiming for a different sound concept. Exactly where to categorize them is a whole other discussion, but I suspect Doug's right that the considerations/advice for choosing a marching euph mouthpiece are different from someone trying to find the right mouthpiece for euphonium playing in a wind ensemble.
hyperbolica
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by hyperbolica »

I've tried a range of euph mouthpieces on trombone and trombone mouthpieces on euph, and I didn't like any of the cross combinations. Do they "work"? Yes, you can play just about anything. Do they work "well"? I don't think so. You don't get the right sound on either side of a mismatch. Mouthpieces aren't that expensive. You can get a good used piece for a decent price. You're better off with separate mouthpieces for each horn. I would, however recommend getting the same or similar rims. If you use a single mouthpiece, you have to shuttle it back and forth between horns, and you're much more liable to forget it one time.

The closest match would be bass bone and euph, but even that cross match doesn't work very well.

The mouthpiece quest thing can get very expensive. You always think you're going to wind up with something perfect, but that never happens. The secret to getting a perfect mouthpiece is to practice it into submission. So it always happens over time, never immediately.

What wound up working for me was DE mouthpieces. You can get just about anything, and match rims. DE on trombone and either DE or DW on euph. On a marching instrument, I'd get something with a plastic rim for temperature/traction and a small bit of cushion. You can get DE stuff with lexan rims.
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ghmerrill
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by ghmerrill »

hyperbolica wrote: Mon Nov 27, 2023 9:38 am The closest match would be bass bone and euph, but even that cross match doesn't work very well.
Some time ago I experimented with a number of bass trombone mouthpieces on my compensating euph (Schilke, Wick, Stork, Bach, etc.). You can play the notes. You can play them at the correct pitch. But otherwise, not so good. I have heard of one person who does habitually use a bass trombone mouthpiece successfully on his euph.
hyperbolica wrote: What wound up working for me was DE mouthpieces. ... You can get DE stuff with lexan rims.
Same here. And I love the Lexan rims.
Gary Merrill
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DE LB K/K9/112 Lexan, Brass Ark MV50R
1947 Olds "Standard" trombone (Bach 12c)
BrassSection
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by BrassSection »

I have an old Bach 12SC that I wouldn’t trade for anything else for my tenor trombone. Pedals to above high Bb easily and with the sound I want. Said mouthpiece was originally my Dad’s from his Army baritone days. I used it throughout school in baritones, but when Mom, Wife, and kids all went together and bought me a euphonium for Birthday/Christmas/Fathers day back in the 90s the 12SC was not the answer. Lower Bb in the staff up to high Bb ok, but lows not so much. Horn came with an Olds 3, lows semi ok, forget highs. Used a Bach 12C I had and was ok but not outstanding. Tried Bach 6.5AL and that was the euph keeper for me. My experience is that tenor ‘bone and baritone easily interchange, but not tenor and euph.
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ghmerrill
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by ghmerrill »

BrassSection wrote: Sat Dec 02, 2023 5:15 pm My experience is that tenor ‘bone and baritone easily interchange, but not tenor and euph.
Yeah. The euph really is a small tuba -- predominantly conical bore and a larger bore. It makes a difference.

For added interest, take a look at Donald Stauffer's book "A Treatise on the Tuba." Difficult to get now, but a real classic.
Gary Merrill
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Mack Brass Compensating Euph
Amati Oval Euph
1924 Buescher 3-valve Eb tuba
Schiller American Heritage 7B clone bass trombone
DE LB K/K9/112 Lexan, Brass Ark MV50R
1947 Olds "Standard" trombone (Bach 12c)
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by marccromme »

On my two euphs - Wessex Dolce and Yamaha Custom - I prefer a small bass bone mouthpiece over a desugnated euph mouthpiece. Gives me better flexibility, better high register (!!!) and good all-round sound. I use a Yamaha 58 or 59, depending on situation. But them I am used to play bass bone on 1 1/4 sizes up to Yeo size.

Others do prefer designated euph mouthpieces - I tried - Schilke 51D, Schilke 52 * Symphony, Wick SM4 ... have them i my drawer, but just go back to Yammy 58 or 59 after a couple of hours again.

Maybe I am biased as I mostly play Bass bone and Eb tuba ???

Give it a try- these are dead cheap to buy ..
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ghmerrill
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by ghmerrill »

marccromme wrote: Sun Dec 03, 2023 2:11 pm Maybe I am biased as I mostly play Bass bone and Eb tuba ???
Which is what I mostly play -- except now I'm playing mostly euph because that's what the band I'm in needs (having already got the trombone parts covered). I definitely prefer my DE euph piece for the sound I want to get out of the euph. But I can see how you might like a "small" bass bone piece. I used to have a Wick 2NAL that I really liked in terms of how it played -- except that I felt it produced too "bright" a sound for me on the bass trombone and the euph. I think that if you're basically a trombone player, you may tend toward a brighter sound, but if you're basically a tuba or euph player you might prefer a "darker" sound -- but on the other hand, euph players at all levels seem to all over the map in terms of the desired brightness or darkness of the sound.
Gary Merrill
Wessex EEb tuba
Mack Brass Compensating Euph
Amati Oval Euph
1924 Buescher 3-valve Eb tuba
Schiller American Heritage 7B clone bass trombone
DE LB K/K9/112 Lexan, Brass Ark MV50R
1947 Olds "Standard" trombone (Bach 12c)
BrassSection
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by BrassSection »

After the musical part of our church service this morning, keyboard player/song leader commented to me “I really enjoyed the brass parts you played on that last song, were you on your trumpet?” Replied no, my euphonium. He replied whatever it was it really sounded good! Not sure I should take that comment very highly, if the euph and trumpet don’t sound any different to him! I was playing trumpet on first song, then switched to trombone on the second, then to the euph. Grandson did comment trumpet really sounded good on first song, I’ll take that since he is a trumpet player.
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by btone »

The Schilke 51, not 51D, will work well on a euphonium or baritone, or a medium or large bore trombone. Without sacrificing anything you might reasonably need on either. Believe me. Try it.
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by AtomicClock »

I struggle with rim changes. Maybe you will, too. Throw away the no-name mouthpiece. Buy a 51D for the euph and a 51c4 (or 51) for the trombone.
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JohnL
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by JohnL »

AtomicClock wrote: Thu Dec 07, 2023 8:45 pm I struggle with rim changes. Maybe you will, too. Throw away the no-name mouthpiece. Buy a 51D for the euph and a 51c4 (or 51) for the trombone.
For whatever reason, the 51D's rim diameter is slightly smaller than that of the 51/51C4/51B (25.55 vs. 25.63 millimeters).
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by AtomicClock »

Yes, I had forgotten. I guess that's why I went with Doug Elliott.
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by ajeasley »

Yep, the Schilke nomenclature is all over the place - I once got a 51 thinking it would just be a shallower variant of the 51D. They're not even close.

There are great euphonium players out there using mouthpieces all over the place. I got decent results for a long time on a stock Bach 4G on euphonium for awhile, and Denis WIck designed the 4AL (one of the ubiquitous standards for euphonium) as his personal trombone mouthpiece. These were the only mouthpieces I ever used regularly on both tenor trombone and euphonium at the same time (the Wick was a Heritage blank).

Most players that I've worked with, outside of the rare occasion doubler, use a different setup on both horns and you just have to practice each. This works best, especially once you settle into what works for your face and sound concept.

Personally, I use Doug Elliott gear on small and large tenor bones (XT, C+ and G cups) and euphonium (EUPH, J cup). I used a BB1 on euphonium for the longest time and probably still would if I was playing euphonium on the regular. The BB1 meets my needs and just sounds right in my head, but the Elliott is so efficient and way more comfortable.

For marching purposes, I wouldn't spend money on anything until you have a very specific reason to (you're going to march in a drum corps that has specific guidance on what to use, or it's under the guidance of a teacher that knows you well).
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Re: Mouthpiece For Euph and Trombone

Post by LIBrassCo »

The Romero line in my stuff works well for both. I've actually had quite a few euph players prefer it to my euph specific mouthpieces.
Check out our new bass trombone doubling mouthpieces: https://www.librassco.com/broadway-bass
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