![]() ![]() Paul had sent me a MP he believed was possibly an unlabelled Conn piece, and Wind Works’ saxophone specialist, Marcel, looked at it closely and confirmed that it was indeed a Conn blank. Shortly after it arrived, I went to my favourite music store in Washington State: Bellingham Wind Works. He and I came to an agreement, and next thing you know the little beastie was winging its way to me via FedEx.ĭue to a family emergency, I was on an extended stay in WA, so Paul sent it to me there. And since he already had 2 other fully playable C sopranos, there was really no use in him keeping it. ![]() Ever since he got it, it had never been playable. Paul had an unrestored, Conn New Wonder Series II in a storage locker. Conn New Wonder Series II C soprano # 176XXX Circa 1926 ![]() Then in January 2020, I took the plunge and got one from my vintage and bass sax buddy, Paul Lindemeyer. If anyone is ever looking for key heights for a Conn New Wonder C soprano, please come on over to my Bassic Sax website.įor years I had toyed with the idea of getting a C-pitched soprano for those occasional oboe parts in pit orchestras when the book I played had 8 bars here, 16 bars here, etc. Included on this page are the key heights. Update: I have now published THE PAGE ON MY WEBSITE about this horn. ![]()
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