Unfortunately, buying a trumpet is alot like buying a car. You cannot come into a car shop and say that all fords mustangs are best and blindly choose one out of them all. You have to look at the entire package before you decide AND you MUST play on them before you decide. In reality, King, Bach, Yamaha, Conn, Selmer all make great instruments and at the beginning/intermediate level it REALLY DOES NOT MATTER what model horn you choose. But DO LOOK for these things: the way the valves feel when you play runs on them. Does the valves feel sticky? if they do put some oil on them and try again. The valves should feel comfortable and should not catch on anything. How balanced the trumpet feels in your hands (especially true if you play in a marching band). Is it bell heavy? or valve heavy? Do the spit valves cover the holes entirely. Nothing can ruin a horn quick than having an air leak in it. Then check the slides. Do the slides pull out with ease or do they catch? Then you should play the horn. (play a chromatic scale from the lowest note you can play to the highest) does the horn respond well to every partial on every key? And finally look for cosmetic damages. Is the horn in good shape? how many scratches? dents. . . I personally bought a beginner Yamaha horn when I was young trumpet player and it played great all throughout middle and high school. Unfortunately my valve casing and valves started corroding. In college I switched to a (state owned) professinoal silver Bach Strad, it played great but I did not like the brilliance so much so I switched to a gold/yellow bach and really liked it. Ive tried Jupiter and liked its sound. The general rule of thumb is the heavier the trumpet the darker the sound but the harder they are to control (pitch and partials). But once you get used to a horn then these things do not bother you. Many young players want to think that there is a golden model that makes you sound like a great trumpet player, but the reality is the trumpet is just the tool to help you convey the music to the listener. Its not the tool itself but how you use it.
2006-08-02 12:43:03
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answer #1
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answered by indiantrumpet 4
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Professional also known as a Step Up Trumpet
2006-08-02 07:28:17
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answer #2
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answered by Conrad M 1
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First of all, know that playing the trumpet is REALLY hard. My friend plays and it is based on your embrouchure. Watch out. But some good ones are: Bach, Yamaha Xeno, Schilke, Amati
2016-03-16 23:28:49
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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I recomend anything Yamaha or dynasty. I have bought instruments on e-bay before. You can get great deals. Just be sure not to get a no name brand or anything made by TriStar.
2006-08-02 07:28:39
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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try a Stradivarius I am not sure of the spelling...but my husband has one and the sound is so pure. (I know it is a violin, but trumpets and coronets too) I have had good luck with stuff I have bought on eBay...bought a set of wooden flutes, 8 of them for $150.00 and they are wonderful.
2006-08-02 07:30:02
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answer #5
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answered by skye 4
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ya ebay would be a good idea....i have a yamaha...they're really good i think. be careful on ebay though so you dont get ripped off
2006-08-02 07:28:58
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answer #6
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answered by pirate_holla 2
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Kohn.....they are very nice with a warm sound, a very common and practical choice.
2006-08-02 07:29:25
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answer #7
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answered by Ryan B 2
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ask your band director
2006-08-02 07:27:51
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answer #8
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answered by rockstar12321 2
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