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Most FREE BLOWING alto ?

16K views 43 replies 36 participants last post by  soybean  
#1 ·
Selmer SA80 ?
 
#10 ·
Vintage - King Super 20
Modern - Borgani Jubilee (with a Phil-Tone “Intrepid”, it almost blows like a tenor - unless your tenor of reference is a Borgani Jubilee)
 
#11 ·
Does anyone else think the YAS-23 is the most free blowing alto? Just for the sake of discussion. It seems we're assuming the OP wants a pro horn, but student horns tend to be designed to prioritize response over other characteristics, right?

Aside from that, I agree with bandmommy about mouthpiece/reed, and of course how well the horn is in adjustment being significantly greater contributors to how free blowing a sax is than the make and model.
 
#12 ·
Does anyone else think the YAS-23 is the most free blowing alto?
Sure. That too.

Aside from that, I agree with bandmommy about mouthpiece/reed, and of course how well the horn is in adjustment being significantly greater contributors to how free blowing a sax is than the make and model.
+10, but don't forget where you are. This is SotW, and wandering mindless threads with lists of opinions is what we do best.
 
#24 ·
I can only compare two I have played heavily, but with the same mouthpiece/lig/reed set up across both, the Yamaha 62 was far more free blowing than the Yanagisawa AWO20. I vastly prefer the AWO20 for many reasons, and like the resistance, and sold on the 62 despite originally thinking I'd keep both.
 
#26 ·
My experience with my horns is that my True Tone is way more free blowing than my SA80ii. The most free blowing horn I've played is perhaps a conn nw1 over at saxquest. I had a ponzol with me that time, the resistance was huge when I played it on my 80ii but it felt like nothing on the conn. I asked the staff and they said the horn didn't even have a proper setup. I played a bunch of horns and it was one of my favorite, along with an sba.
 
#29 ·
Ok. Just what does "free blowing" mean when it comes to a saxophone? Does it have to do with quick response, or does it mean less resistance---which could be related response?

Does a "free blowing" saxophone get a brighter tone with more overtones, than one that is more "un-freeblowing" or resistant?

Just what makes one saxophone more "free blowing" than the next? Any thoughts on that?

Trumpet players talk about "back pressure" and I have heard some sax players use the term as well. Trumpets are very long, mostly cylindrical, tubes with a small diameter that flare out at the end. If one blows through the lead pipe of a trumpet one can feel the "back pressure" which is similar to blowing up a balloon. If blows through the neck of a saxophone with the mouthpiece removed fingering low Bb there is no comparison with the resistance felt blowing into a trumpet. Sax players should leave that expression to the brass players and call theirs resistance IMO.

A corollary question: Is a "free blowing" saxophone desirable? (I enjoy playing "devil's advocate" on topics I am interested in, so bear with me. A point to all these questions is coming---just not in this post. :))
 
#30 ·
Hello.
In terms of "free-blowing" I think I would put the accent more in the field of the mouthpieces than in the saxophones themselves.
After all, physically, in terms of design and building engineering, the instruments -the saxes- tend to be very, very, very similar (diameters, dimensions of tubes...). -OK, some vintage saxophones can incorporate noticeable differences in design and building technique and even material, but I asume we are speaking in "general terms"-.

Therefore, the differences in aspects like "free-blowing", response, etc, etc. could be related more with the componets of the saxophone that are not exactly the instrument, mainly the mouthpiece, but also, of course, the reed and even the ligature.

So, I also agree with Bandmommy and I think that the main focus in this area probably must be the mouthpiece. After all, again "physically", the moutpieces DO have substantial differences in terms of design and building technique and, of course, even material: the tip opening, the facing length, the size and form of the chamber, the sank, etc, etc. are effective characteristics that impact directly and deeply in the "free-blowing" sensation.

Actually, I would say that the same saxophone could be absolutely free-blowing with a mouthpiece and extremely resistent with another mouthpiece. And I think that most of us have experimented that sensation.

Regards.
 
#33 ·
I don't mean to be offensive or angry, but this thread is just nonsense, as are many others that tout one brand over another (that useless and silly hate-Yanagisawa thread is an example). How could any of the brands mentioned here be any more or less free-blowing than any other brand?

They ALL have an expanding conical tube with basically the same measurements. If the pads seal well, the horn is going to blow as free as the mouthpiece/reed combination allows. Some have already mentioned these factors. DAVE
 
#38 ·
I don't mean to be offensive or angry, but this thread is just nonsense, as are many others that tout one brand over another (that useless and silly hate-Yanagisawa thread is an example). How could any of the brands mentioned here be any more or less free-blowing than any other brand?

They ALL have an expanding conical tube with basically the same measurements. If the pads seal well, the horn is going to blow as free as the mouthpiece/reed combination allows. Some have already mentioned these factors. DAVE
I'm not sure of the science behind it, but there's no denying some makes are more resistant than others. My SA80II is more resistant than any of my S20's. I do know the neck has a different angle between these two brands. The bores are also different sizes in that the neck on one won't slot into the receiver of the other. Again - I have no science to back up the resistance I perceive as I play, but that doesn't mean it doesn't exist. I do know my instruments are leak free, and I use the same MPC/reed setup on both.