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REYNOLDS CONTEMPORA DOUBLE FRENCH HORN NICE,FE-03 PLAYS GREAT SERIAL 274XXX
Estimated price for orientation: 849 $
Category: French Horns
Class:
Description Brand: Conn
THIS IS A NICE HORN MADE IN U.S.A.THIS HORN PLAYS AND SOUNDS GREAT,THIS IS ONE OF THOSE PEOPLE LOOK FOR AND ONLY HOPE TO FIND,,,,THIS IS A PROFESSIONAL MODEL,MADE IN USA, ,THIS AN FE -03 MODEL ALTHOUGH THEY ONLY MARK IT CONTEMPORASERIAL# 274XXX MADE IN 1972 THE SLIDES ARE EASILY REMOVED,AND ROTORS ARE LIGHT AND FAST, AND WOULD DO FINE FOR AN ADVANCED STUDENT, ADVANCED PLAYER .FOR AN EXTRA HORN FOR COLLEGE OR PROFESSIONAL.,VERY NICE LIGHTLY USED CASE CHECK PICTURES PLEASE READ FULL DESCRIPTION BELOW, 1964-1979Model Size Description Example FE-01 Bore: .468″
Bell: 12″ Contempora B♭/F Double French Horn | Medium weight bell (.012″ thick); medium-large bell throat | Kruspe wrap style | Materials: solid nickel silver | Finish: baked epoxy finish FE-03 Bore: .468″
Bell: 12″ Contempora B♭/F Double French Horn | Medium weight bell (.012″ thick); medium-large bell throat | Kruspe wrap style | Materials: brass; nickel-silver slide tubes, bracing and trim | Finish: baked epoxy finish
Notes and Quotes1966 Reynolds catalog:Finest possible horn for professionals. Solid nickel silver [model FE-01] throughout produces a resonant ‘dark’ sound. Quiet floating-type rotary valves with long shafts and bearings give exceptional ease of operation. Extremely wide range.1977 Reynolds catalog:[FE-01] The choice of symphony, concert and professional artists, the FE-01 is extremely flexible with excellent intonation thoughout the entire range. Solid nickel silver construction produces a dark, resonant sound. Quiet, floating type rotary valves afford quick resonse and ease of playing.[FE-03] Superb craftsmanship and engineering produce a French horn capable of satisfying the most exacting demands of advanced players. Features the same distinctive characteristics and quality of the FE-01 Contempora French horn except that it is solid brass with nickel-silver tubes, bracing and trim. Use of brass rather than nickel-silver gives the instrument a somewhat brighter, freer tone.It took me several years on the faculty at ASU to even notice this horn, a Reynolds Pottag Model horn. When I noticed it what really caught my attention was that it has a Lawson FB 114 leadpipe, but still somehow ended up among the horns used in our methods classes. Late this summer I checked it out, I had for some time been curious about the potential of this horn.The Reynolds Pottag Model is something of a classic model, and it has actually won blind tests horns done at two different recent horn workshops by . Max Pottag was a famous, big name player of the past; he was a student of Gumpert at the Leipzig Conservatory, a member of the Chicago Symphony from 1907-1947, and several of his publications are standards that remain in print to this day.Goes without saying, there are a lot of interesting places on the Internet. One of those places if you are interested in Reynolds horns is the site , which has a great description of this horn. This is also just a fascinating website to check out, “Dedicated to the history and brass instruments of the F.A. Reynolds CompanyAt some point in the early history of the Reynolds Double Horn, Reynolds contracted Max Pottag, long-time second horn with the Chicago Symphony to promote sales of the new horn. It’s yet unclear to what extent and exactly when Pottag was initially involved with Reynolds; however, while the Reynolds horn uses the updated Kruspe-Horner wrap, to many ears it sounds more like the smaller Geyer horn that Pottag was using at the time, perhaps due in part to a smaller bell throat than the Kruspe-Horner or Conn 8D models. By the mid 1940s, Reynolds was marketing their double horn as the Pottag Model. In 1947, Pottag retired from the CSO after 40 years of playing and began teaching at Northwestern.They also quote his endorsement:Max Pottag | “The Reynolds Double French Horn is a most sensitively responding instrument and has an unusually easy-speaking upper register – so important to Horn players. Its wondrous tone quality, complete even range and sureness is noteworthy. I am using it exclusively, love it and I am happy indeed to recommend it to any French Horn player.”I would say that the ASU horn has a good upper register, and the intonation is a bit squirrely but manageable. It is pretty responsive but the strength of this horn would seem to me to be the tone. It has a very nice sound, they did get something really right about the bell and tapers and metal thickness and temper. .This brings us back to the playing test that Ken Pope had at the 2008 IHS Denver horn workshop. There is a bias against Reynolds horns to be sure, but if one of these classic horns comes your way they are worth checking out.THIS IS ONE OF THOSE PEOPLE LOOK FOR AND ONLY HOPE TO FIND,,IT STILL GOING ,,THIS IA A PROFESSIONAL MODEL,MADE IN USA, , STILL LOOKS PRETTY GOOD CHECK PICTURES HAS SOME LACQUER WEAR , AND A FEW SIGNS OF REPAIR ,IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS OR WANT DIFFERENT PICTURES PLEASE ASK,, COMPRESSION IS VERY GOOD AND MAYBE BETTER THAN MANY NEW HORNS, THAT, ,, AND WOULD DO FINE FOR AN ADVANCED STUDENT, ADVANCED PLAYER FOR AN EXTRA HORN FOR COLLEGE OR PROFESSIONAL., CHECK PICTURES SERIAL THIS IS A PROFESSIONAL INSTRUMENT FE-03 READ DETAILS BELOW THE BELL HAS HAD SOME DENT REMOVAL BUT LOOKS VERY GOOD,THE CASE IS USABLE ,NORMAL FEET PUSHED IN ON BOTTOM, THESE PLASTIC CASES HAVE THERE FAULTS,,PLEASE CHECK PICTURES ,AND ASK FOR MORE IF NEEDED??MOST IMPORTANT PART OF THIS HORN IS COMPRESSION,WHICH IS GOOD,, THE AVERAGE COST OF HAVING HORNS REPAIRED FOR COMPRESSION IS IN THE $1000,00 PLUS RANGE,AND MAY NOT BE REPAIRED TO THE LEVEL OF THIS HORN,,,VERY NICE LIGHTLY USED CASE,WITHPLEASE ASK QUESTIONS ,,I DO NOT WANT RETURNS,,THANKS,,CHECKMY FEEDBACK , I TRY HARD TO SELL QUALITY HORNS,EDWIN EJAYSBIKE
Description
| Brand: | Conn |
THIS IS A NICE HORN MADE IN U.S.A.THIS HORN PLAYS AND SOUNDS GREAT,THIS IS ONE OF THOSE PEOPLE LOOK FOR AND ONLY HOPE TO FIND,,,,THIS IS A PROFESSIONAL MODEL,MADE IN USA, ,THIS AN FE -03 MODEL ALTHOUGH THEY ONLY MARK IT CONTEMPORASERIAL# 274XXX MADE IN 1972 THE SLIDES ARE EASILY REMOVED,AND ROTORS ARE LIGHT AND FAST, AND WOULD DO FINE FOR AN ADVANCED STUDENT, ADVANCED PLAYER .FOR AN EXTRA HORN FOR COLLEGE OR PROFESSIONAL.,VERY NICE LIGHTLY USED CASE CHECK PICTURES PLEASE READ FULL DESCRIPTION BELOW,
1964-1979
Notes and Quotes1966 Reynolds catalog:Finest possible horn for professionals. Solid nickel silver [model FE-01] throughout produces a resonant ‘dark’ sound. Quiet floating-type rotary valves with long shafts and bearings give exceptional ease of operation. Extremely wide range.1977 Reynolds catalog:[FE-01] The choice of symphony, concert and professional artists, the FE-01 is extremely flexible with excellent intonation thoughout the entire range. Solid nickel silver construction produces a dark, resonant sound. Quiet, floating type rotary valves afford quick resonse and ease of playing.[FE-03] Superb craftsmanship and engineering produce a French horn capable of satisfying the most exacting demands of advanced players. Features the same distinctive characteristics and quality of the FE-01 Contempora French horn except that it is solid brass with nickel-silver tubes, bracing and trim. Use of brass rather than nickel-silver gives the instrument a somewhat brighter, freer tone.
| Model | Size | Description | Example |
| FE-01 | Bore: .468″ Bell: 12″ | Contempora B♭/F Double French Horn | Medium weight bell (.012″ thick); medium-large bell throat | Kruspe wrap style | Materials: solid nickel silver | Finish: baked epoxy finish | |
| FE-03 | Bore: .468″ Bell: 12″ | Contempora B♭/F Double French Horn | Medium weight bell (.012″ thick); medium-large bell throat | Kruspe wrap style | Materials: brass; nickel-silver slide tubes, bracing and trim | Finish: baked epoxy finish |
It took me several years on the faculty at ASU to even notice this horn, a Reynolds Pottag Model horn. When I noticed it what really caught my attention was that it has a Lawson FB 114 leadpipe, but still somehow ended up among the horns used in our methods classes. Late this summer I checked it out, I had for some time been curious about the potential of this horn.The Reynolds Pottag Model is something of a classic model, and it has actually won blind tests horns done at two different recent horn workshops by . Max Pottag was a famous, big name player of the past; he was a student of Gumpert at the Leipzig Conservatory, a member of the Chicago Symphony from 1907-1947, and several of his publications are standards that remain in print to this day.Goes without saying, there are a lot of interesting places on the Internet. One of those places if you are interested in Reynolds horns is the site , which has a great description of this horn. This is also just a fascinating website to check out, “Dedicated to the history and brass instruments of the F.A. Reynolds CompanyAt some point in the early history of the Reynolds Double Horn, Reynolds contracted Max Pottag, long-time second horn with the Chicago Symphony to promote sales of the new horn. It’s yet unclear to what extent and exactly when Pottag was initially involved with Reynolds; however, while the Reynolds horn uses the updated Kruspe-Horner wrap, to many ears it sounds more like the smaller Geyer horn that Pottag was using at the time, perhaps due in part to a smaller bell throat than the Kruspe-Horner or Conn 8D models. By the mid 1940s, Reynolds was marketing their double horn as the Pottag Model. In 1947, Pottag retired from the CSO after 40 years of playing and began teaching at Northwestern.They also quote his endorsement:Max Pottag | “The Reynolds Double French Horn is a most sensitively responding instrument and has an unusually easy-speaking upper register – so important to Horn players. Its wondrous tone quality, complete even range and sureness is noteworthy. I am using it exclusively, love it and I am happy indeed to recommend it to any French Horn player.”I would say that the ASU horn has a good upper register, and the intonation is a bit squirrely but manageable. It is pretty responsive but the strength of this horn would seem to me to be the tone. It has a very nice sound, they did get something really right about the bell and tapers and metal thickness and temper. .This brings us back to the playing test that Ken Pope had at the 2008 IHS Denver horn workshop. There is a bias against Reynolds horns to be sure, but if one of these classic horns comes your way they are worth checking out.
THIS IS ONE OF THOSE PEOPLE LOOK FOR AND ONLY HOPE TO FIND,,IT STILL GOING ,,THIS IA A PROFESSIONAL MODEL,MADE IN USA, , STILL LOOKS PRETTY GOOD CHECK PICTURES HAS SOME LACQUER WEAR , AND A FEW SIGNS OF REPAIR ,IF YOU HAVE QUESTIONS OR WANT DIFFERENT PICTURES PLEASE ASK,, COMPRESSION IS VERY GOOD AND MAYBE BETTER THAN MANY NEW HORNS, THAT, ,, AND WOULD DO FINE FOR AN ADVANCED STUDENT, ADVANCED PLAYER FOR AN EXTRA HORN FOR COLLEGE OR PROFESSIONAL., CHECK PICTURES SERIAL THIS IS A PROFESSIONAL INSTRUMENT FE-03 READ DETAILS BELOW THE BELL HAS HAD SOME DENT REMOVAL BUT LOOKS VERY GOOD,THE CASE IS USABLE ,NORMAL FEET PUSHED IN ON BOTTOM, THESE PLASTIC CASES HAVE THERE FAULTS,,PLEASE CHECK PICTURES ,AND ASK FOR MORE IF NEEDED??MOST IMPORTANT PART OF THIS HORN IS COMPRESSION,WHICH IS GOOD,, THE AVERAGE COST OF HAVING HORNS REPAIRED FOR COMPRESSION IS IN THE $1000,00 PLUS RANGE,AND MAY NOT BE REPAIRED TO THE LEVEL OF THIS HORN,,,VERY NICE LIGHTLY USED CASE,WITHPLEASE ASK QUESTIONS ,,I DO NOT WANT RETURNS,,THANKS,,CHECKMY FEEDBACK , I TRY HARD TO SELL QUALITY HORNS,EDWIN EJAYSBIKE