Where Musical Stuff Speaks Loudly
Posts tagged clarinet shaped objects
Sicko Green Clarinet!
Aug 19th
Here’s another clarinet shaped object (CSO) – and it’s from the former blog of Music Thing: a lime green clarinet from eBay! Good thing it went unsold at nearly 5 pounds!
Ladies and Gentlemen, the CSO Choir!
Aug 9th
Buffet. Yamaha. Selmer. These are three of the well-known companies reputed to crank out the best clarinets, and sadly, they’re never found at the most ennui-laden place (in my opinion), Walmart. One time, when I did my shopping trek in this vast, ultra-luminous, and stentorian purgatory on earth (Get the picture, parents whose autistic children have sensory-related burdens?), I eyed a display case with musical instruments, and one of them was a clarinet, and like most of the rest, it was manufactured by a lesser-known brand. A few years later, I searched for “clarinet” on Walmart’s website and found the same brand of the single-reeded stick! I read the reviews and agreed with the reviewer who rated it lowly.
The clarinets on display at Walmart are examples of clarinet-shaped objects (CSOs), a subcategory of the maligned-by-legions-of-band-directors’ instrument shaped objects (ISOs). Because I had played clarinet throughout middle school and in my freshmen year of high school (in my ill-fated youth orchestra audition), I’m familiar with the Selmer and Yamaha (I own the latter’s YCL-20, purchased in 2003, in 8th grade.) ones, but the knock-off B-flat sopranos are manufactured (likely in Third World nations, particularly China) with pot metal keys and cruddier-than-ebonite plastics and are sold under names ridiculously unheard in many professional players’ and band directors’ ears.
I generally agree with parents whose children play these instruments and found them awful and whose local repair shop have to bear the heavy-as-a-contra-alto-clarinet cross of fixing it beyond repair. They reported leaky keywork, rough mouthpieces, and squeaky intonation, as well as incapability to play in the clarino to altissimo registers. Despite the flaws that make the CSOs abominable, big-box retailers like Costco, BJ’s Wholesale, Kmart, and the aforementioned Walmart still tout them, bedecking the case with the ludicrous instruments. There are also already cheap and inferior versions of transverse C concert flutes, B-flat trumpets and cornets, and alto and (sometimes) tenor saxophones in the market under those brands not well respected, but I don’t think the future’s too distant for “bargain” bass clarinets, trombones, F horns, oboes, and other band instruments.
If I were a band director, or a band composer/arranger regardless of level, I’d strongly recommend players to avert the CSOs and rent to own (even buy if extra affluent) an instrument from your local music specialist retailer, as many band directors have mentioned since those instruments hit the big-box market time and time again.
So what do you think of off-brand clarinets, if you have touched a clarinet in your life or if you are a school music teacher?
What Color is A Clarinet?
Aug 9th

Kids whose music teachers indoctrinate them with information of the instruments in an orchestra (and/or band) at one point in time agree that clarinets, with the exception of replications of certain historical prototypes like the wistful-to-purchase chalumeau, are supposed to have black bodies, but there are some companies that debunk this fact, or should I say, stereotype.
For instance, one brand which many band directors and clarinet mentors around the world would advise those studying the B-flat soprano clarinet and those playing it in bands from purchasing it (Makes a good flea market bazaar or Walmart item!), is one of the instrument makers which cranks out more than the black ones familiar to everyone, but those in green, red, white, blue, and even pink! They have gold-plated keys, usually reserved for professionals, but they’re beginner/student instruments, by the way. If I were to buy a Billy Biggle-blue clarinet for under $250, I’d test it out and find it rather cruddy in tone and function. Also, I agree with band directors with chary musical aptitudes and sights that it would strongly likely be damaged beyond repair and unplayable for a few weeks. There are other companies who create those bizarre-colored clarinets, but I decided to keep the blog relatively short to list. At least it’s made of plastic, the material which is very feasible for a marching band field or the concert hall.
In my opinion, I decided to keep my clarinet black, and have an alto clarinet with it if I have the money and time. I have a Yamaha one and it plays really good, but there’s no way (except for creating a novelty lamp for say, the Yuletide season) that I’ll buy these colored versions of those things. Speaking of the dreaded CSOs (clarinet shaped objects), I’ll be discussing them on my next entry.
Cheers for now!
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