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Field of the Invention
The present invention pertains to the field of mouthpieces for non-French horn labrosone brass musical instruments, specifically an improved mouthpiece rim for brass instruments such as tubas, trumpets, euphoniums, and trombones.
Background Art
A musical brass instrument produces sound by the sympathetic vibration of air. A sympathetic vibration is a harmonic phenomenon wherein a formerly passive vibratory body responds to external vibrations to which it has a harmonic likeness, and in the case of a brass instrument such as a trumpet, sound is produced by sympathetic vibration of air in a tubular resonator, for instance, a trumpet mouthpiece, in sympathy with the vibration of the player's lips. Brass instruments are thus also referred to as labrosones, literally meaning “lip-vibrated instruments”.
The player's ability to control the sound produced by the instrument thus is critically dependent on the player's embouchure control, specifically, the agility and flexibility of the player's lips engaging the mouthpiece of the instrument, which depends at least partially on the physical characteristics of the mouthpiece rim with which the player's lips engage.
Historically, the French horn was the first musical instrument in the brass family of instruments to be used consistently by composers in the early 1700s in orchestras, and its mouthpiece was apparently copied and repeated for all succeeding orchestral brass family instrument mouthpieces by expanding its relative size based on the different sized instruments. This resulted in a homogenous look for brass instrument family mouthpieces, but unfortunately, a resized French horn mouthpiece for a tuba, for instance, results in a mouthpiece with a fat and unwieldy rim that causes the tubaist to lose essential agility and flexibility. Non-French horn playing musicians, such as tubaists and trombonists, all suffer from the shape and size of the mouthpiece rims for those instruments: the French horn mouthpiece shape is truly only suitable for the French horn mouthpiece itself. The configuration of mouthpiece rims for brass instruments other than for French horns thus are apparently more a function and result of history and visual appeal rather than actual performance enhancement value to the players of those instruments.
What is needed is an improved mouthpiece rim for non-French horn labrosone brass instruments whose shape and size maximizes playing agility, and flexibility, and reduces to the lowest possible degree the lips dragging, sticking, or catching on the rim. Additionally, the improved rim provides a more suitable container for the player's lips, as opposed to mashing them down or unduly pressing on them.
The invention is an improved rim for all non-French horn labrosone brass instrument mouthpieces having a cup with an uppermost circumference to which the improved rim is affixed, the improved rim having an inner edge and an opposed outer edge, and a crown with a predetermined shape formed between the inner edge and the outer edge joining the inner edge with the outer edge and having an uppermost height measurement taken from the inner edge and the outer edge. The improved rim has a rim width measured as a smallest predetermined width measurement of at least one of the inner edge, the crown, and the outer edge, and is a same width as a playing surface of the improved rim. The playing surface is a surface against which a plurality of lips of a musician engages the improved rim so as to create a seal between the plurality of lips and the improved rim.
The rim width according to the invention ranges between about 0.1 mm at its smallest relative side to no more than about 6.85 mm for a mouthpiece for a tuba and a sousaphone, no more than about 6.05 mm for a mouthpiece for a bass trombone, no more than about 5.95 mm for a mouthpiece for at least one of a euphonium, a baritone horn, a tenor trombone, an alto trombone, a soprano trombone, and a sackbut, and no more than about 4.30 mm for a mouthpiece for at least one of a trumpet, cornet and a flugelhorn.
The improved rim is also provided as a removable or permanently affixed rim for the mouthpiece.
The features and advantages of the invention will become apparent from a consideration of the subsequent detailed description presented in connection with accompanying drawings, in which:
The following is a list of reference labels used in the drawings to label components of different embodiments of the invention, and the names of the indicated components.
The inventors note that while the brass mouthpiece industry uses common terms such as bite or crown, there are no standard definitions for these terms. For utmost clarity, the following terms used in this disclosure and their definitions are as follows:
An improved mouthpiece for non-French horn labrosone brass instruments according to the invention 10 and an improved mouthpiece rim 10a according to the invention are shown in
Turning to the Figures, the improved mouthpiece 10 has a cup 30 upon which the improved rim 10a is formed and/or affixed to a rim end 30a and has a hole 30d formed at a shank end 30c that leads to a tubular shank 32 with a narrowed throat 34 leading to a relatively wider backbore 36. The improved mouthpiece 10 is thus generally conical (“V” shaped) or semi circular (“U” shaped) in shape, wider at the rim end 30a, with a relatively narrow throat 34 at a bottom of the cup 30 as compared to the diameter of the cup measured at a rim location, and then widening again at the backbore 36. The inventors note that his invention does not primarily change the general shape of the cup, shank, throat, and backbore of the mouthpiece; rather, the focus of his invention is specifically on an improved rim 10a.
The improved rim 10a is comprised of a rim width 10b measured typically from an inner edge 10e to an opposed outer edge 10g, the improved rim further comprised of a cup diameter 10c, a crown 10i, a bite 10h, and the contour 10d, taken together defining a shape, a size and a profile of the improved rim 10a. As previously noted, the crown 10i of the representative tuba mouthpiece shown in
The bite 10h is a shape of the inner edge 10e, the bite extending from a lowermost portion of the inner edge of the improved rim 10a, but excluding any inner wall of the cup 30 and can range from sharply defined, where an uppermost position of the inner edge meets the crown 10i at an approximately 90 degree angle, or rounded, where the bite 10h slopes upwardly and outwardly from an interior of the cup 30 to meet the crown 10i so as to resemble a portion of a parabolic curve rising to its vertex. The bite 10h can be a smooth, regular extension of the overall shape of the cup 30, or designed to increase at a smaller rate such that a cup diameter is proportionally wider than would be expected if the bite slope was simply an extension of the established upwards shape of inner wall of the cup.
The rim 10a has a crown 10i, a highest point relative to the inner edge 10e and outer edge 10g. Like the bite 10h, a shape of the crown 10i can be rounded, flat or mostly flattened, as shown in
One of the inventors is a tubaist with over 35 years of world class professional playing experience who notes that in his experimentation and development of the improved mouthpiece 10 and specifically the improved rim 10a, seemingly small or subtle changes in the prior art mouthpieces 20 can nevertheless result in significant changes in playability, and his desire to improve his musical and technical abilities as a tubaist specifically, but also as a brass player generally, led to the development of a new range of performance-based rim widths 10b for the various non-French horn family of brass instruments.
The improved rim widths 10b according to the invention are as follows for each instrument:
For comparison purposes, the following are standard width ranges for rims found in the prior art:
Prior art trumpet family of instruments (including cornets and flugalhorns): 4.32-5.092+ mm
It should be noted that in the prior art, it is common practice for a listed “rim” size to be measured across the widest inside diameter of the mouthpiece. This measurement is more accurately called the “inside diameter” or the “cup diameter”, and the inventors stress that they are not using this common measuring method for the “rim” size; references to “rim width” truly measures only the rim itself, and here “cup diameter” refers to the diameter measured across a top of the cup.
The improved rim 10a may be composed of any of many different materials or combinations thereof that can readily be formed into shaped objects provided that the components selected are consistent with the intended operation of the invention, in this case a mouthpiece formed into a cup with a shank, and a through hole leading from a bottom of the cup and through the shank. Suitable materials include composites such as carbon-fiber and/or other like materials, polymers such as plastic, nylon, metals, alloys, wood and/or other like materials that are commonly or uncommonly used for the prior art mouthpieces 20, and includes any additional metal plating on the improved rim 10a that is commonly used to cover prior art mouthpieces and rims. It should be noted that the materials used must be durable, and of sufficient strength and stiffness to withstand significant, persistent pressure from both a musician's lips as well as from the air being forced into the cup and through the shank.
As shown in
The inventors stress that although the rim width 10b is generally measured from the inner edge 10e to the outer edge 10g, given that there are many possible variations on the contours 10d, bites 10h, and crowns 10i that can for practical purposes effectively change a playable width of the rim width 10b, the term “rim width” used here as it pertains to the improved mouthpiece 10 and improved rim 10a also includes any rim width that falls within the range of widths described in this disclosure, regardless of the contour 10d and bite 10h or edge shapes of the rim itself. Hence, “rim width” used in this disclosure is not limited to the outermost measurements of the improved rim 10a itself, but includes a width of a playing surface of the rim, meaning a surface area against which the player's lips press and engage. When the rim width 10b as measured from the cup diameter to the outermost edge of the rim, and the playing surface of the rim due to contour and edge design differ, the rim width 10b includes the smallest width dimension. As the contour 10d and the bite 10h can be adjusted, the inventor can foresee circumstances where the playing surface of the improved rim 10a may actually be smaller than the overall rim width 10b as measured in a traditional manner from the outer edge 10g to the inner edge 10e of the rim. Hence, the following, non-exhaustive examples of possible contour and edge shapes are included as part of the invention described herein:
The rim 10a having a flattened, or non-domed shape crown 10i, with the bite 10h on a same horizontal plane as the contour 10d and where the playable surface is evenly distributed across the entire surface (
The rim 10a having a rounded, or domed shape crown 10i, with the inner edge 10e on a different and lower horizontal plane relative to the crown 10i and relative to the outer edge 10g, and where the playable surface area is along the crown 10i towards the outer edge 10g (
The rim 10a having a rounded, or domed shape crown 10i, whose crown 10i is on a same plane as the inner edge 10e, but where the contour 10d is on a lower plane compared to that of the inner edge 10e, where the playable surface area is along the crown 10i and the bite 10h, where the player's lips do not touch the outer edge 10g along the outermost portion of the improved rim 10a (
These are just a few examples of rim configuration that are contemplated by the improved mouthpiece 10 and improved rim 10a described herein, and these examples are provided as guidance to show that the playable surface of the rim width is a critical improvement over the prior art mouthpiece rim.
The improved rim 10a gives musicians for all the brass family of instruments the same potential for flexibility and agility French hornists have long enjoyed and are famous for, making for instance the performance of the last movement of the Strauss 2nd Horn Concerto so dazzling. Contrast that potential to the tubaists' challenge for similar dazzle on the last movement of the Vaughan Williams Concerto for Bass Tuba, where an unimproved rim requires the tubaist to fight dragging, sticking, or catching of the players' lips on the unimproved prior art rim, as well as mashing the lips down or unduly pressing the lips against the unimproved rim.
Another wonderful benefit for tubaists in particular is not having the big fat unwieldy rim hit their noses as they go into the low pedal register, which is annoying as well as callous-producing and painful. Without this fat rim, tubaists can find a new potential for their low register embouchure that is much more effective than just continually extending the upper register embouchure down into the pedal register.
The present invention may be readily and easily adapted to any mouthpiece currently available on the market, and additionally used on any future mouthpieces.
The potential for improved flexibility and agility (and reducing to the lowest possible degree the lips dragging, sticking, or catching on the rim, along with mashing them down or unduly pressing on them) is valuable for all player skill levels, from beginner to top professionals, and therefore improves playing experience.
It is to be understood that the above-described arrangements are only illustrative of the application of the principles of the present invention. Numerous modifications and alternative arrangements may be devised by those skilled in the art without departing from the scope of the present invention.
Accordingly, any components of the present invention indicated in the drawings or herein are given as an example of possible components and not as a limitation.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3807271 | Nipken | Apr 1974 | A |
7560631 | John et al. | Jul 2009 | B1 |
8036493 | Neustel | Oct 2011 | B1 |
20140109748 | Griffin | Apr 2014 | A1 |
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