Bobby G
Well-Known Member
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- 4,645
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- Wonderful Welwyn Garden City, Herts
Ooh, thanks Ken, that sounds useful!
Ken wrote:
Pete's own experience (if I understood it correctly), bears this out in as much as he found possibly the best Tenor he had ever played amongst Hanson's stock, but my reading between the lines left me with the impression that he found a "particular" Hanson.
Pete Thomas wrote:
Ken wrote:
Snip
I also found the post on SOTW a bit odd and will probably reply there some time, but as people have said you have to take this kind of review with a pinch of salt due to the subjectivity. Even the excellent reviews that Steve Howard does (which I recommend to be taken seriously) are still subjective regarding the sound and ergonomics. His authority re: build quaility however is what counts the most.
I think the guy on SOTW was/is just a prat; a bit of research showed that he doesn't appear to have the 'credentials' he claimed and is a mainly trombone-playing leader of a community band in Middlesborough, and a teacher in 'real life' (this may explain why he thinks everyone should take his word as gospel! 🙂
(He certainly doesn't have much command of English!)
He did have the good grace to apologise for calling me 'silly' 😀
Ken wrote:
I am really curious though Pete... could that altissimo problem you discovered, not have been corrected???. My "novice" brain seems to say to me that only design faults can't be rectified... or is this a wrong assumption?... or is it just a fact of life that every sax has "some" inherent fault?Pete Thomas wrote:
I ended up not buying that particular Hanson as after a few days I found one altissimo note (G) that I couldn't get as easily as on my martin or Conn. You might think that is strange as the horn definitely felt the best I'd played, but you need to weigh up all the factors involved and in the end the altissimo G was more important that "feel".
