are described for you in the following. Surely the easiest way is to take a mouthpiece recommended by many people, professionals
Prof. Ewald Koch
recommends a Wurlitzer mouthpiece to his students, with an M 3 + facing, of course in combination with the Foglietta
type A developed by himself.
Mr Viotto
formerly made his facings above all for those clarinet players who followed the opposite course
and choose the mouthpiece to match their Vandoren reed, which is also a possibility.
Do try a Viotto mouthpiece with our new type C* reed !
We
also had to do some thinking about testing which reed with which mouthpiece.
For this reason we have already tried a range of facings and mouthpieces and thought very intensively about the
interactivity of reeds and mouthpiece faces. The result is a particular mouthpiece available with different openings
and facings ( also for Boehm clarinets ), as well as the corresponding reed, namely model C*.
Although this combination is based on theoretical consideration, some clarinet players have already been
convinced of it. Peter Przybylla, solo clarinettist of the SWR-Rundfunkorchester,
( orchestra of the south-west German broadcasting station ), has been praising this combination
for some years already. Jörg Fadle of the Deutsches Symphonieorchester Berlin
( German symphonic orchestra Berlin ) was also very taken with it. Moreover numerous instrument makers
have voiced their content.
François Benda
plays model F on his Charles Bay mouthpiece and his students, at least those who play Boehm clarinets, use the
same reed and fasten it on a Vandoren B 40.
Sabine Meyer and Reiner Wehle
told us they play just a normal mouthpiece, which is quite similar to the old Wurlitzer M 3 or the Zinner model 3 M
or a facing of Johann Berger wth a tip opening of 90 - 95 hundredth of a millimetere and a length of approx. 25
millimeteres between table and tip. The clarinet reed is Foglietta type E*.
For all those who haven't finished their search for a combination yet we would like to remark that, if possible,
length of the reeds wind cut should not be shorter than the mouthpiece facing. Therefore, keep your fingers off a long
mouthpiece facing combined with a short cut reed. It only means trouble !
In addition, you should check the mouthpiece for no gross faults. Look for detail on how to do that under
mouthpiece recommendations.