![]() ![]() Note down any problems and take a pic of them.Ĭhances are it's not quite as bad as your initial disappointment leads you believe. Use your other sax as a model and check every pad, cork, spring and buffer is in place. Then, after the initial disappointment has faded, get it out again and check it over really carefully. Woodwind and Brass are having a sale, and you can get a new case from them for fourteen quid! See 2 Get it as clean as you can, then put it away for the weekend, don't look at it. ![]() How about this as a plan of action?ġ Don't worry about the case. It's a wreck! Had it been a spares or repair price (which it should have been) i would quite look forward to slowly having a go at rebuilding it, which I guess is what I will do now (with some detailed instructions) but very frustrating as i was so keen to start playing it - oh well - live and learn Rgrds - Rob. Absolutely filthy (didn't want to touch it) cleaned it all up new reed disinfected and tried it - nothing. You know the advice you always give to youngsters about not jumping in to quick and think before you buy etc? Hmmmm - should have listened to my own advice - horn arrived, case worth about 50p, horn with mouthpice and reed still in place. Buescher Aristocrat Thanks for comments: well, I received the sax and. ![]() I'd love to have another go on it now to see how I'd get on with it, but as a first foray into alto you should be ok with it. He also gave it the once-over and said it was a nice horn. As I knew absolutley nothing about saxophones beyond knowing you had to blow in the thin end (I'd had a fancy for a sax for a little while, and I acquired it in a three-way swap involving my Fender bass guitar, some cash and the horn in a kind of 'pass what you have to the person on your left' deal) I thought it was fantastic just being able to get some notes out of it that sounded quite good was such a wonderful feeling! As I got into playing a bit more, I realised it was an OK horn, quite easy to play in my limited self-taught way, played in tune etc, and was told by an ex-pro at my first ever jam session that it sounded good and that I was getting the hang of it quite well. When I started playing about 5 years ago my first horn was a Buescher Aristocrat 200. I've kept mine, out of largely sentimental reasons, and although it's not a patch on my Yanagisawa, or my Buescher True Tone alto for that matter, it still plays well enough. However, their tone is fine, and they're certainly OK to play. They're not the greatest saxes in the world, to be honest, and nowhere near as good as the earlier Buescher Aristocrats. I got one of these as my first tenor, nearly thirty years ago. Results 1 - 48 of 88 - Buy sell and advertise all Musical Instruments including Saxophones for sale and wanted second hand and used Buescher aristocrat 200. ![]()
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