

- CONN SAXOPHONE SERIAL NUMBER LOOKUP P SERIES HOW TO
- CONN SAXOPHONE SERIAL NUMBER LOOKUP P SERIES SERIES
When parents ask me if a vintage horn would be good for their child just starting out, this is exactly why I say: No. I also remember thinking: This is the most awkward horn I have ever played in my entire life. Before I became proficient in playing vintage saxophones, I remember finding this New Wonder being a pinky buster. I have played this Conn on and off over the 35 or so years that I’ve known Kenton. Kenton played that sax for a few years until he bought a new Mark VI in 1967-the same one he still uses today. Kenton had a paper route, so he gave all the money he made through his job to his teacher until the tenor was paid off. Kenton didn’t have the money to buy the sax outright, but his teacher let him pay for it through instalments. Although the horn was more than 40 years old already by that time, it was in its original case, and shiny as a hubcap.
CONN SAXOPHONE SERIAL NUMBER LOOKUP P SERIES HOW TO
Kenton was really interested in learning how to play sax, and one day this silver saxophone was lying there tempting him. If I had had to start on a Conn New Wonder, Martin Handcraft, or Buescher True Tone-all horns I own and love to use now-I’m not sure I would have kept playing.he was taking clarinet lessons, but his teacher also taught the saxophone.

This New Wonder’s back storyīased on published serial # charts this New Wonder is from 1922-23, since its serial is 89XXX. It means more to me than many of my vintage babies since it belonged to the man who initially inspired me, and got me going on saxophone the right way. I would be lying if I didn’t say this horn has some pretty sentimental value to me. Never wanting to see a vintage horn in need of a good home, Kenton’s tenor came to live with me.
CONN SAXOPHONE SERIAL NUMBER LOOKUP P SERIES SERIES
This left the Conn New Wonder Series I needing a home. I connected him with a musical colleague of mine who had a minty, closet VI that needed a player. Although he had a Mark VI, he also had a silver Conn tenor that he occasionally brought to school when his Selmer was in the shop.įast forward to spring of this year when Kenton finally decided he wanted a second Mark VI as a back-up horn.

He was also my first private saxophone teacher. My junior high school band teacher played tenor saxophone, clarinet, and flute. When I started grade 8, I met a man who I would end up remaining friends with my entire life. How I ended up with a Conn New Wonder Series I tenor The difference this year, is that I have had this horn for months now, but due to the shit storm that I found myself in during the summer, I never had a chance to write about this interesting Conn New Wonder Series I. My studio has a Valor gas fire place, so everyone-our two black cats, my “girls”, horns, and of course me-will all be nice and toasty warm over the next few months while we get pounded with our wet, winter weather.Īt first blush fall 2019 appears no different than the one of 2018, 2017 et al. It’s almost like I feel I need to take one in before the Northwest’s cold, damp, winter rains settle in. It’s fall, and those of you who have been following my website for years can probably predict what happens often in the fall: I write about a new-to-me horn.
