Jay Metcalf (BetterSax) put the 3 available finishes on his Session Alto to the test. Not sure if this breaks new ground, but it sure is interesting.
View: https://youtu.be/MOds-U-Cxdw
Which makes a lot of sense.Compare any three saxes. Do they all sound the same?
Find one that sounds distinctive - good or bad, and swap necks. In my experience of trying similar horns, the characteristic tone often follows the neck.
They didn’t test the one I bought either, so I tested it for four years ten months & 48,000 miles. During the test I reported back to warranty service 71 times. 🍋🍋🍋🍋 I filed a lemon claim and got back 100% of my purchase price. My testing service fee.Ford didn’t test the two I bought, both had several faults when new.
Perhaps the 10/6 top hat of the Mad Hatter.All these subtle differences can be mitigated by a skilled Hatter. For a formal sound a Homburg or Bowler. For the old fashioned sound a Boater. For the Yorkshire sound, a flat cap and Whippet preceded by a meal of tripe. Ah yes tripe. We found a common theme.
Yes. At least one will be different from the others.Ok, here is the elephant in the room. Take three other samples of the same finish and repeat the test. Is the outcome going to be the same?
What type of shoes ? Women’s high heel shoes may sound thin. Men’s leather dress shoes, dunno 🤷♂️Repeat the test in a shoe store if you want more results for the same number of tests.
