In my opinion, no. . Though the brand has improved over the years, they are still below par. A good clarinet is a wooden one made by Buffet, Yamaha or Selmer. These three makers have student instruments and professional instruments. As a clarinet player with a degree in music, I would not purchase a Jupiter clarinet for any reason.
Just something that is durable but still sounds okay. I'm not saying to get a cheap, bad sounding clarinet, but you certainly don't want to use something expensive. It WILL get scratched up, and possibly dropped and so it will be more prone to damage. Plastic is probably a better choice. I used a plastic Yamaha clarinet for years and it was good through all the rain and damage.
I personally play a Yamaha clarinet, and have owned it for nearly 8 and a half years, and have had hardly any problems with it whatsoever. I also own a Yamaha saxophone which is second hand but still in very good condition.I have also played a Jupiter clarinet, and they are quite nice to play. :)
Yes you can its like low F but with your thumb key.
roland, even though yamaha makes acoustic ,roland is still better
In my opinion, no. . Though the brand has improved over the years, they are still below par. A good clarinet is a wooden one made by Buffet, Yamaha or Selmer. These three makers have student instruments and professional instruments. As a clarinet player with a degree in music, I would not purchase a Jupiter clarinet for any reason.
You can still get the OEM parts from most Yamaha dealers! They will probably have to order most parts. Or you can look online. there are many sites that sell the OEM parts. I own a 1984 XT600 and I've had no problems finding parts. I hope this helps you!
Just something that is durable but still sounds okay. I'm not saying to get a cheap, bad sounding clarinet, but you certainly don't want to use something expensive. It WILL get scratched up, and possibly dropped and so it will be more prone to damage. Plastic is probably a better choice. I used a plastic Yamaha clarinet for years and it was good through all the rain and damage.
Yes it is still in production. 2012.
I personally play a Yamaha clarinet, and have owned it for nearly 8 and a half years, and have had hardly any problems with it whatsoever. I also own a Yamaha saxophone which is second hand but still in very good condition.I have also played a Jupiter clarinet, and they are quite nice to play. :)
It was very popular and it still is very popular.
1927
No they stop bringing them to Canada in 2008
The clarinet family includes the regular clarinet, a smaller version that is still straight called the E-flat clarinet, and then several larger ones that have bends or curves in them, including (in size order) the alto clarinet, the bass clarinet, the contra-alto or E-flat contrabass, and the B-flat contrabass. A soprano saxophone looks somewhat like a metal clarinet, and has a single-reed mouthpiece like the clarinet, but it is part of the saxophone family, not the clarinet family - the bore of the instrument and the fingering system are entirely different from the clarinets.
Yes you can its like low F but with your thumb key.
roland, even though yamaha makes acoustic ,roland is still better
Well there is not necessarily one instrument that is dissonant to the clarinet. Really any instrument is dissonant to the clarinet as long as they are playing a note that has dissonance with the note that the clarinet is playing. So say the clarinet plays an A and a violin (or any other instrument) played a G# there will be a lot of dissonant. If after this you still don't understand try to find a piano and play notes that are next to each other and you will find the dissonance