A couple of things spring to mind as this thread continues. (“As The Thread Turns”, coming soon on You-Flix…)
One - the idea that a reed from a box should be “perfect”. None are, in reality. Expecting that is foolish, and if you think a bit about how reeds are actually made, you will come to the same conclusion. Every reed is different, if only just a little.
Two - I don’t want to worry about reeds. I have enough to worry about when I put the horn together without the thought that my playing goals for today will be co-opted by a bad reed.
Three - I want to be in control of my sound. It’s going to rain where I am today, I can feel it coming. This will affect the temperature in my practice room and the humidity everywhere in the house and my mood. So things will be different today compared to yesterday How will I get “my sound”? By paying attention to my air and my focus. I have to be flexible enough to adapt. Even with the same reed as yesterday, I will have to make minor adjustments to get a good sound.
Four - Item 3 above is one reason I rotate reeds. I play a different one each day. It forces me to adapt to the minor differences, in order to get my sound. Which is good training for me.
This is why I work on my reeds. I play a variety of brands and strengths (not really a big variety), and I want them out of the equation when I am practicing or performing. I don’t make a distinction between practice and performance reeds. I just put the next reed on each time I play. Every month or 6 weeks, I will spend a half hour or so getting 3 or 4 new reeds ready, to replace the ones in my case that have died. I generally don’t “rework” old reeds, when a reed is done, out it goes. I don’t break reeds in.
I’m not fussy, really, I just want my reeds to work, so I can think about more important things.
One - the idea that a reed from a box should be “perfect”. None are, in reality. Expecting that is foolish, and if you think a bit about how reeds are actually made, you will come to the same conclusion. Every reed is different, if only just a little.
Two - I don’t want to worry about reeds. I have enough to worry about when I put the horn together without the thought that my playing goals for today will be co-opted by a bad reed.
Three - I want to be in control of my sound. It’s going to rain where I am today, I can feel it coming. This will affect the temperature in my practice room and the humidity everywhere in the house and my mood. So things will be different today compared to yesterday How will I get “my sound”? By paying attention to my air and my focus. I have to be flexible enough to adapt. Even with the same reed as yesterday, I will have to make minor adjustments to get a good sound.
Four - Item 3 above is one reason I rotate reeds. I play a different one each day. It forces me to adapt to the minor differences, in order to get my sound. Which is good training for me.
This is why I work on my reeds. I play a variety of brands and strengths (not really a big variety), and I want them out of the equation when I am practicing or performing. I don’t make a distinction between practice and performance reeds. I just put the next reed on each time I play. Every month or 6 weeks, I will spend a half hour or so getting 3 or 4 new reeds ready, to replace the ones in my case that have died. I generally don’t “rework” old reeds, when a reed is done, out it goes. I don’t break reeds in.
I’m not fussy, really, I just want my reeds to work, so I can think about more important things.
