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Taylor ‘Phat Boy’ Review by Davie Howes. Not so long ago I was earning a living playing my trumpet in the four corners of the world, but never with Maynard (trumpet joke!) These days I support the family working as a professional arranger, but the trumpet/flugel remains my first love. I was delighted to be asked to try out the latest offering from Taylor Trumpets. |
Custom Phat Boy -
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TAYLOR ‘PHAT BOY’ FLUGELHORN REVIEW (Bryan Corbett) Upon opening the package that contained the instrument for review, the first thing that hits you when you see the new Taylor flugel is ‘wow’, what a horny looking horn!' The bright orange bell section sparkling, then wrapping the bell section into a golden mat like orange, with a beautifully unique curved bow. The flugel oozes quality in both looks and build. You realise from the minute you pick it up that you are holding a piece of top quality engineering. To me the real test is what is produced when blown. If you see my own horns then you would realise that I don’t go for the pretty shinny finish. Blowing on an equivalent to a 1 1/2c flugel mouthpiece and just focusing on a few long notes, the immediate sound quality of the instrument comes across. Every note seems in tune to my ears, no real adjustment in blowing needed to produce low ‘D’ or liping in on middle ‘D&E’ notes. The 3rd valve trigger is largely unemployed. The notes seem to centre easily and the horn blows freely. It really gives you the confidence of striking a beautiful clean, centred note each time. Still in your mind is the feeling you are holding something a bit unique and special. The different shape of this flugel gives a slightly unfamiliar feel to that of a conventional flugel. The weight seems about average, (no problem for those of you who have a problem with the weight of Taylor’s heavyweight trumpets). The fast, precise stainless steel valves move beautifully and confidently as you glide up a down the instrument. You are not only aware of the ease of blowing, but also the warm, mat like sound that you are producing. The horn speaks magnificently. The warmth and fat richness in the sound is very noticeable, (to me how a flugel should sound), and at low volume produces an essence of air in the velvet sound. You always feel that the ‘Phat Boy’ will take whatever you can give it, even when you try and give the sound a real ‘wrasp’, the instrument consumes the air-flow to produce a large, rich fat sound. For the jazzer the instrument not only offers its sound, it’s slightly different feel is brought into your playing, creating different line blowing and textures. It all feels fresh and you are still aware that you are holding a unique hand built horn. The only real problem I encountered with the ‘Phat Boy’ was the positioning of the right hand thumb. It cannot wrap around the valve block like on a more conventional instrument due to the shaping of the bell flare. However, after a couple of days with the horn my thumb found its own position and holding it didn’t present a problem. For me, the Taylor ‘Phat Boy’ gives you a high end flugel horn of quality manufacture, and where it stands out from the crowd is it gives you something personal, something slightly different and unique. If you’re in the hunt for a new flugelhorn give it go. It will stick in your memory for sure! |
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Photos show standard Taylor Flugelhorns with red brass
or optional copper bell.
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The Taylor Flugelhorn was developed in conjunction with flugelhorn specialist Eddie Severn. The aim was to recreate the sound of the old French classics. It had to have that sound and be as reliable as possible. It has the very best modern valve block, with stainless steel pistons for dependability. The bore size is small, like the old French instruments. |
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Most modern flugels have a bell
with a large throat area. This provides reasonable
volume and projection. The big drawback to this, is that
it makes the flugel sound more like a trombone. If that
is the sound you want, fine. The main difference in the
Taylor Flugelhorn is the smaller bell dimensions. This
gives a sweeter, more subtle, 'airier' sound.
A smaller horn is easier to play because you don't need so much air to fill it. The tone comes together; the amount of 'air' you let into the sound becomes more controllable. It's less tiring to play, and the biggest bonus of all is improved intonation. If you are serious about the flugelhorn, and want more than 'a big fat trumpet on steroids', why not give the Taylor Flugelhorn a try? |
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| Photo shows a special order Custom Shop Flugelhorn made for Jazz musician Byron Wallen. It features a heavyweight naturally aged copper bell and branch for that gorgeous colour. The standard bell is either red or yellow brass. | |
Andy Taylor er en av jazzverdenens
mest respekterte trompet–
og flugelhornbyggere gjennom sitt
artisteri og nyskapende design.
Taylor Trumpets virkeliggjør de
siste ideene innen trompetdesign
med radikale
nye ideer kombinert med tradisjonelt håndverk.
Instrumentene
er håndbygget på bestilling med topp kvalitet.
En Taylor Trompet er spesiell, lyder spesielt og føles spesiell.