JDK wrote:
...If I could play Sax, I'd envy you (twice over)!
Thanks, James. While I could not afford a true warbird, a number of the horns in my collection are pre-World War II American horns. The older American horns just had a sound to them.
My "working" horn that I use is a 1945 Buescher "Big B" Tenor. Buescher was the only instrument manufacturing company allowed to continue making instruments (albeit on a very limited basis) during the war. As a way of "celebrating" the end of the war, Buescher put a larger bell flare on these horns (larger bell = more spread = more volume), with this particular one being among the first to have the larger bell.
The pride and joy of my collection is a magnificently restored 1927 Conn New Wonder Series II baritone sax. These were generally considered the best sounding baritone saxophones ever made. That is why Gerry Mulligan (great jazz baritone saxophonist) used these horns. We have a good deal of circumstantial evidence tracing this horn particular back to the Sammy Kaye Big Band, where it was used from the formation of the band until the mid-1960s, when it was unceremoniously "retired". It passed through at least one other owner before appearing in a pawnshop in New York in 1980. A puppeteer from Maryland bought the horn, and seldom played it. I bought it from him in 1990, unrestored, and having no idea of the horn's pedigree or history. Only with the advent of the internet did I realize what a gem I had discovered. It was restored in 2002 for its 75th birthday back to the original style silver plate when it came from the factory in 1927.