Doc, I think you missed one pro in your pros & cons list: for a developing player having a reed that gives you consistent feedback is truly a crucial advantage. With synthetics you have a fixed benchmark day after day and you see your improvements against that, rather than having to add to the equation the moodiness of your cane reed. For this reason alone I’ll never go back to cane… Thanks for your vids! Competent, informative, no nonsense and way too funny for a music channel.
That's an EXCELLENT point! I'm learning Taekwondo with my son, I'm imagining how frustrating it would be if my uniform changed the way my kicks felt every time I practiced. That consistency is undoubtedly a game changer as well. I'm a fan of Legere now, obviously. Happy practicing !
Great point! How I wished we had decent synthetics like this when I was starting out forming my embouchure back in the 90s. One less (big) variable to worry about.
I started clarinet at the end of February and it was the main reason I bought one early on and it's saved me tremendous time I was spending fiddling with cane reeds. I tried a vandoren cane reed today for the first time in over a month and it was really nice, but as usual after like 20-30 mins of playing it started to feel thuddy. I don't know how to handle that as such a noob, so I switched back over to my Alta for my lesson.
Dr. Wally, I love you! Your videos are so good. Not only do you really know your shit, you are so funny, so lovably nerdy, and, as I realized after watching this video, you are really a phenomenal speaker! OMG! How do you rattle off all this information without ever stuttering, misspeaking, saying "uh" or "you know" all the time (like I do)??? I am a film teacher (day job) besides a saxophone player (hobby, weekend warrior) so I know a thing or two about video, and damn, you're so good! Your videos are well-paced, well shot, sound great, and maybe most importantly of all, always leave me feeling good, better than before I watched them. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge with the world, encouraging other people, and genuinely taking pleasure in empowering others rather than showing off or demeaning others with your superior skill, wit, and intelligence (even though you could!). And wow, your glib, articulate delivery here is akin to someone playing note for note John Coltrane's amazing cadenza on "I Want to Talk About You" from memory. You are a treasure. Thank you so much for your great work, and if you ever have moments of self-doubt, please remember that there are people out here in Internetland who take great comfort from your work.
Dr. Wally I am a beginner "older" student on the saxophone and doing this as a "music" hobby and my instructor feels that when I brought the subject of using a SYNTHETIC reeds to cut cost of buy a lot of canes reeds he states that "beginner" sax players MUST use cane first and when I asked why he stated that it doesn't develop proper embouchure for playing. Well I have been playing now for a year and I have not had embouchure issues playing with Legere Synthetic reeds. I started with a size 2 and now I graduated to a size 2.75 and my instructor can't tell the difference. So I truly recommend that beginner sax players can start on synthetic reeds if they want to but also have the experience with cane reeds too.
I’m a high school band director. I’m also a middle school band director. I have also played in various ensembles which call for me to play a few doubles. As a performer I can’t recommend these enough. Which means(to me) that as a teacher I can’t recommend these enough to my students. Plain and simple. My beginning band students start on cane reeds and I introduce the plasticover reeds as an emergency reed. If they enjoy those then I suggest getting a Legere (signature or American) after they have settled on their reed strength. I demonstrate on occasion and they always ask “why do your reeds always just work no matter when you pick up your horn?” So, I tell them. Hope this helps.
Btw I’m a huge fan of the American cut! Something about that reinforced spine really works for me, however I did go down a 1/2 on strength instead of the 1/4 in comparison to my cane reeds (Rico Jazz Selects) Welcome to the dark side!
Hey JD! Thanks so much for your perspective, it's exactly what I was looking for. Also, as a recovering middle school and high school band director - thanks for your service! It's a tough job, but has an immeasurable impact on young lives (as you know very well). As for the dark side - when do I get my Sith robes and red sabre?
I'm late to the party, but I just picked sax up again after 30 years away. I've been wrestling with cane reeds since starting back and it's been really frustrating while trying to develop an embouchure again and find a reed, any reed, that I wasn't constantly tinkering with. WOWOWOWOW! Hello Legere American Cut! Where have you been all my life. I can slap that puppy on and actually work on playing, rather than fiddling with the stupid reed. Game changer! And I never would have tried if I hadn't seen your video, Dr. Wally, so thanks!
As a pro sax/clarinet player and teacher for over 50 years, one of the best features, which goes unsaid in your video, is for doublers. I can play a show or other performance, play on clarinet for 15 minutes, and pick up my alto without even worrying about whether the reed is dried out. I pick up my double and it just plays fine immediately-often its alto going to tenor- same reliable result. What a fantastic feature of the Legere reeds that I use on all my single reeds instruments! As you did cover, the weather situation is also totally eliminated- (except maybe for the temp of the surroundings, but that’s not the problem of the reed.)
Absolutely! I played in a pit orchestra for "Suessical" last summer and the Reed 2 book called for Oboe, Tenor, Clarinet, and Bass Clarinet. I covered all with Legere reeds and it is such a joy to just "pick up and play" without constant reed management. Now if I could just get Legere to ship their English Horn reeds my world would be complete.
Absolutlely. I play baritone sax with a Daddario Select Jazz unfiled 3S cane reed in a big band and double on bass clarinet using a Légère European Cut 2.5, which has more depth than the Signature Légère Reed. I also keep a baritone sax Légère American Cut 2.75 in my case and at time for playing home. Finally, I will definitely try a Bb clarinet Légère French Cut after.
You are covering all the points Doctor. I am a pro player with over 60 records ( jazz) and hundreds of jingle dates, shows, you name it.I am an old guy now and don´t tour any more. The last four years I was touring and recording (Jazz) I went over to Legere Signature on Tenor; Alto and Soprano and my stress level went to zero. The guys i was touring with asked " Bob, you are so much more relaxed on the gigs now. What´s going on? And I said " I´m playing on reeds that work every night, every set." I rotated them, wrote the number of how many gigs or sessions i used them on. Some mouthpieces are better with them than others. Now I am not touring and I have plenty of time to work on cane and enjoy the many nuances available with cane. It´s a hobby in a way. Legere were really good for me and I recorded some serious music on them and was very happy with the result. If I have an accident with a Legere, it is more expensive than a cane reed. Glad you addressed this issue. Can I get the space suits on Amazon? No one could hear i was play a synthetic reed.
I play Alto in two concert bands and now only use the Legere American Cut reed in conjunction with the Claude Delange mouthpiece. I love the tone I get from the reeds. More importantly after we take rehearsal or gig breaks I don’t need to re-wet the reed. They are ready to play straight away. I love the consistency of the reeds and the longevity. The quarter strengths allow me to precisely select the reed for the mouthpiece being used. I do find the reeds soften slightly over time.
Lots of variables in saxophone tone. The list is daunting. Like the blade of grass, the primal people honed a tonal palette that stresses the individual tonal variants. Then man invented recording systems that featured the reed/blade nuances. The saxophone tone is modeled in schools and then the 'individual' becomes the artist. Though never 'perfect' long live the variant tones of the saxophone.
As a former "Pro" player and teacher who is now trying to get his chops back, I had my doubts due to the number of synthetic reeds I tried in the 80s and 90s. all of those, besides sounding like an electric razor stuck on high, left a bad taste in my mouth...literally! Since I have returned to a regular, as much as I can, schedule of practicing and hoperully gigging soon, I have taken an interest in Legere. I am primarily an alto player and Bari, but often do Tenor and soprano along with Clarinet. Having a good sounding/playing/tasting/feeling synthetic reed would take a lot of the concern I have while doubling. Your rough play testing today really showed how close these American Cut reeds sounded like a good cane reed! The sound was very very similar with just a hint of buzziness, if that is a word. The Signature cut sounded like a reed that was nearing the end of it's lifespan but still sounded better than many cane reeds out of a box. I like the idea of just pulling my alto off the stand and playing when I fit in my 20 minutes of practicing in betweenn work, chores, life! As for when a student should use one.... I would have to say when that student shows enough responsiblity with his cane reeds to understand the need to be careful with the synthetic. So That may be a shifty answer, but not all students are as responcible as another. If you need a year in schooling, Probably late Middle School to High School. You video, and others, have piqued my curiostiy. I will give a few a try and let you know my impressions. Now, I better go practice before Dr. Wallace yells at me again lol
Thanks for your perspective, and I agree Brian! There is a buzziness, not unpleasant, but buzzier? Also agree with late middle to high school as a starter point. But this is all of course to say: GO PRACTICE!
Dr. Wally, as a 50 year sax veteran I was skeptical about the Legere reeds per my comments 7 months ago. However, 6 months ago I switched from a hard rubber Morgan Excalibur 6* to a Jody Jazz DV 7. That significantly improved my tone, intonation and ease of altissimo while still using D'Addario 4S filed reeds. However, I was still having some harmonic overtones coming out in altissimo A, Bb and B. So Jan 15th I move up to a Jody Jazz DV7*. I also bought a couple of Legere Signature reeds, in 3.00 and 3.25 strengths. Bingo... the 3.25 turned out to be the perfect reed for me. Excellent in all registers. I am very happy now. I can now focus my frustrations elsewhere. No more cane reeds for me. Consistency is the key... This reed works in the recording studio as well, even with my high end ribbon mic (AEA R84). I highly recommend the Legere reeds. Also get two so you can rotate them.
Wow. I mean. WOW! For a long time (I started on tenor in 1973 -in 8th grade) I discounted the notion of even thinking about playing one of “those plastic reeds.” Over time I’ve started playing alto in my church worship team.. A month ago I got serious, bit the bullet and bought a Legere American Cut 2.5, 2.25, and 2.00. Gotta say that I was immediately impressed, blown away (insert your favorite adjective here) by the response that the 2.25 gave me! Dumbfounded. I do believe that beginners should have a good cane reed foundation, but instructors should be open-minded about synthetics! My low register opened up, I was able to play low C mp … I am a definite 63 yr old convert! LOL
Doc - Always enjoy your reviews and all the amazing content you provide on the web (for free, no less). I use Legere American Cut on alto and tenor, about 1/2 strength below what I normally use for cane. Two things I like: 1. Every time I pick up the horn to practice, it's ready to go. No time wasted fussing with a cane reed or wondering if the problem is with the reed or me. (it's me) 2. If you're playing a gig with multiple horns, you can leave a horn on the stand, pick it up 1/2 way the second set and it responds like you just warmed it up. No surprises.
Band Director here, Brass Specialist. I LOVE these reeds!! I love the fact that my kids can go from playing inside with AC to outside in the Florida humidity and not worry about their reeds. I’ve told my kids these are required for Marching Band!!
Thanks Scott!! Even as a saxophone nerd, these seem like a no-brainer for marching band and many other uses. I remember playing at a conference at UF - man the humidity!! What part of Florida are you teaching? (and thanks for the input)
I really enjoy your channel. As a repair tech I use synthetic reads exclusively to test instruments after repair. That way I eliminate a variable in test playing. By the way, a professional musician is one that has made more than they have spent on their gear when they die.
I've found this very helpful, especially as you have long been a confirmed cane person and also you are a very skilled professional. I as an adult beginner to intermediate level have found Legere Signature especially good, but felt guilty as there is still a feeling they're not the REAL THING that a TRUE saxophone player would use. It's part of saxophone lore that you should learn how to select and use saxophone reeds if you aspire to being a PROPER sax player, even though I do not really feel up to it or know quite how to go about it. That can increases stress and self doubt and this removes one key aspect of discouragement. I suspect encouraging beginners to at least try a Legere (not any old synthetic reed) alongside a cane one, and NOT FEEL GUILTY ABOUT IT would enable many more to stay the course. It's very confirming indeeed that you like them, even saying you may switch. Thanks Wally I love your sage advice and good sense of humour in equal measure.
Dr Wally, I am now almost £90 poorer having bought American cut for Tenor and Alto, plus Euro cut on Bass Clarinet. These reeds are superb and perfect for me with limited practice time.
Some additional comments from a professional since 1976 ... I have played Legere' (signature initially) and now American for the past (maybe can't remember)) 10 years. Response to your cons ... 1. they don't break very easily ... I have rubbed, scratched etc. reeds many times and they just don't break (at least I have never had one) .. so for high school kids I think they would be a fantastic alternative ... 2. The case thing solved ... I bought a LaVoz reed guard (4 reeds) and keep four Legere' reeds in it. I rotate the reeds (as they all play the same) and it is easy to see the strength if you use different strengths (I don't) ... If you play different mouthpieces I would purchase an additional reed guard. Beside that ... The greatest pro is they all play the same every time... no fussing, no wetting (actually used Bourbon years ago) and in outdoor climates like Central Florida .. they are never affected by humidity. For me as a working pro, just knowing when I put the horn together that I will know exactly what the sound coming out will be every time is the greatest advantage. Also, it seems as if they don't wear out .... at least not for years if you take care of them ... And lastly as with any reed or mouthpiece over time if you practice and play enough on them, you adapt to the subtle nuisances to the point that I have never had any fellow professional complain about my sound (and there are many excellent players in the Central Florida area) ... I have actually convinced a few stogy ones to switch.
I have watched many of your Saxophone Academy lessons and have learned tidbits that I used when I taught students and now in my performances. I have used legere reeds for 4+ years and run into many professional musicians that criticize my use of “plastic” reeds. I enjoyed this reinforcement that I can now use in my responses. I rotate all my reeds and still have my first legere reed that has been used over 4 years.
First of all, I LOVE your videos. You're extremely knowledgeable, and the way you present your content is entertaining and super enjoyable to listen to. Secondly, I recently made the switch to Legere on all three of my horns (soprano, alto, and tenor). I'm NEVER going to look back. I've always been ultra picky with cane reeds, and the inconsistency from reed to reed within a single box has always driven me MAD. Reeds have been 31 years of Hell for me in conjunction with the 31 years of Heaven I've experienced playing the saxophone. Legere is the savior I've always needed. 😂 With that being said, I do feel like I sacrifice a TINY bit of sound on alto and tenor, but that's only when compared to a GOOD cane reed. It's a small price to pay for consistency, and frankly....better mental health. 😂 On soprano, though? No lie, I've NEVER played a cane reed that sounds better than my Legere Signature. I feel like my current setup on soprano, including my Legere, has unlocked my peak soprano playing. Granted, I'm not a SUPER skilled soprano player, so that's probably like being the valedictorian of Summer School. 😂
I am primarily a flute player (cuban style), but am also asked to play reeds. I have ben using Legere for the last 4 yrs. and love them. For clarinet, the European cut is great. Have been using the American cut on tenor and alto. Have started to use the French cut on tenor with good results, darker sound.
I live in Toronto. In summer I use cane on clarinet, sax and bassoon. Desember to March or thereabouts, I use Legere: summer concerts outdoors, Legere. 10 of my D'Addarios cost the same as one Legere.Now I keep the Legeres in the packaging they came in. The Legere Bassoon reed is the bomb but cleaning is a bugger.
I used one in college and my saxophone professor was pretty neutral. He didn’t recommend them, but he also didn’t say I couldn’t use them. He left the decision up to me to explore and to see how it worked for me. I honestly love playing them because they’re so responsive and consistent and purchasing one that is on point especially after you find the one that is perfect vs having to sift through a box of ten cane reeds and only finding one or two that work is in my opinion a better investment. Not only that but synthetic reeds are moving up in the ranks due to the improvements in their design and the different cuts. Hence, I see them becoming a normal thing and cane will still be available but not for the faint of time to break them in. Great video and info as always Dr. WW! God bless!
Having a reed that just plays is just so useful for me. As a teacher of woodwinds I'll have several reed instruments on their stands ready to play. With the legere I just pick up the instrument and play no time wasted preparing my instrument in the students lesson. They are a gift for the doubler.
Dr. Wally: Very popular topic. You play so well. After listening 3 times I would range the tone quality as cane no1, am. cut no 2 and the signature reed on 3. I think I can hear little of the plastic sound on the signature in the upper register, but doesn't disturb me much. Because of the time to search for a good read (and lack of carpenter skills) I was happy to start on synthetic reeds many years ago and heard no complain about the tone. The way we play are more important, I guess. After some time the synth reed will be bent and a little changed, but not as quickly as cane. If you play not more than an hour a day the synth reed can last for years. Also I think the Legere reeds with the same number are not completely equal, but way better than cane reeds. Warning: If you buy on the net, be careful. If too cheap maybe fake Legere. I bought once for alto. Thank you for the nice test performance.
I'm classically trained, been playing for 40 years - now playing rock, blues, and a bit of jazz (my stretch goal!). Our prof in university back in the 80s was a Vandoren player 100%. 6 years ago I tried Legere - best thing that ever happened to me, never going back! All the reasons you mention are bang on - especially removing the reed variable - that's a HUGE plus, timewise and psychologically lol. Leger is based in a town not far from where I live in Toronto - I'm extremely proud of this Canadian success story. I've had to experiment with my style and strength several times - and every time I've used their exchange policy, they've been 100% supportive (even with some dialogue via email to help me decide). Currently looking at the Tenor American Cut 2.75 (quarter strengths rule!) I bought yesterday - took it out of the box and played a gig last night, no problemo. I agree with you on the case. In fact I wish they would not include a case and reduce the price. They should re-design the case for 4 reeds and sell it separately, so we only buy it once. If only I had these reeds 30 years ago.
Im 68 and just picked up the sax 5 years ago. I have never played an instrument so at my age every minute of practice counts. My biggest frustration with the sax was the reeds, too wet, too dry, always an issue when I wanted to practice. I started using Legere a few years ago and it solved my problem but I felt guilty not playing on cane. I thought every good player needed to play on a cane reed. I'm over that now and enjoy using the Legere American Cut. Thanks for this video Dr Wally, excellent!
Legere Signature is just fantastic for me and consistent with my Morgan Excalibur 6L and Oleg Ligature without the frustration of cane reeds. Very rich sound with my vintage Buescher alto. Like Dr. Wally says, lets me focus on playing and practice and take breaks without the reed drying out.
I've been playing on Legere for ~3 years and never looked back. I have 4 that I keep in rotation and. I have only had one "fail" on me (which was the original one that I bought when I switched. The use cases for doublers, "international" gigers, marching performers, wedding musicians- There are just too many practical use cases that are common. Synthetics are not the same as they were in 2008 and i think some musicians and educators are bias toward the early days of synthetics when they were trying to figure them out. I would recommend them 100% to my students, which I already do. The only thing that I think is important is making sure you find the right strength that fits you best. It took me a decent amount of trial and error until I settled on stength. That is something that I could see as a barrier but the return/exchange policy is pretty amazing.
A “Chamber Crawl?” That is some super geeky music stuff right there! Love it! I need to attend one of these to watch! Great review. Just bought a legiere reed after having bought a couple about a decade ago…the modern ones are soooo much better. Really like the product.
Band director/saxophonist here. I love the Legere Signature reeds for classical. My friends and I always found that they work especially well for the lower horns. They’re also great for when you’re teaching a lesson/class and your horns sit in the stand for a long time. Doesn’t matter if they dry out: still works! I don’t recommend them until the student is at the high school level. By then, most all of them have learned to respect the reed tip.
I play other instruments on gigs and will often put my horn down for 30-45 minutes a time. I switched to synthetic for this and it’s been awesome. Reed is always ready to go. I noticed they do get soft over time and they do not last forever.
@@drwallysax Sorry! Good WOW! The 3.5 was a bit bright and edgy for my personal taste. When I heard the 3.25 I thought you went back to the Vandoren but a better reed than the first.
Great insight on the Legere reed. I’m a winery, pub saxophonist that have to setup all my equipment, lighting, and sound. I don’t have as must time to fuss with reed wetting or how it’s playing. The Legere reed is alway ready to go for a three hour show. Thanks for the unbiased review.
I’m a high school student and these have taken over-a huge portion of saxophonists and clarinetists have started using them, including myself. They eliminate a lot of the immature squeaks and squeals that characterize high school bands.
Yes I have legere Alto reed 2.5 I love playing it, I play brass band marrage shows, event gigs in India Mumbai, feel comfortable playing with the reed.
I used to teach quite a bit. Legere was a product I recommended pretty strongly to my beginning students, and anyone who wasn't studying or performing music full-time. I stick to natural products for gigging, recording ETC, but I'm perfectly comfortable using Legere for auditions, lessons, big band work ETC. I do notice a little buzz on the American cut Legere tenor sax 3 and 1/2 strength, but other than that, no issues with sound. I've played Legere products in so-called synthetic only bands, and nobody ever noticed a difference in my playing.
I just LOVE them! Simple as that! I remember to freak out in my graduation gig because my special reed that I played just one time a week to save it for the end of the month simply didn't work the way it should because of the weather that day! A nightmare!!
I switched to Légere on all of my saxes. It is very convenient not to suck on them 5 min before you start to play. And, this is the biggest advantage, If it sounds crappy, i' m sure it's me and not the reed 😄. Playin' A-cut in Alto. Signature in Bari Tenor and Soprano
In my humble opinion . Your sound on cane is the true sound of an alto saxophone. Gorgeous. However I need to try the plastic considering the pros. Thx for the video. Looking forward to your video in recording studio.
The American cut sounds more pleasant than the signature cut. Both sound brighter than the cane but the signature cut seems to have a nasal quality to it. I own a signature one that I have been using for a while now. Will definitely buy the American cut to try with my WCW mouthpiece. Shout-out to WCW!!
Have started playing again after many years of being stagnate. So stagnate that I'd never heard of synthetic reeds until today!! Glad I came across this video!! I was having trouble with the lower notes and was happy that you said that playing a Legere reed can make ALL the difference on being able to play low notes better. ❤️ your tone when you play the Legere American Cut synthetic reed. Just ordered one!!! Cain't wait to start playing on it.
Chelsa, this makes me so happy, thank you! So glad you're playing again, be sure to hit me up with questions and take advantage of all our great free stuff on the website!
In watching your Video , I found the American cut responded extremely close as possible to a cane reed have to say I was impressed by the Presentation by the doctor
Doc the Legere American cut reeds are even better than the signatures, I think they have a sound and feel that lends itself to a jazz sound. I use a Jody Jazz HR 7* on Tenor with a 2 AC and the only con I can find is it's to bright, I just picked up a 56 from Windy City last month a killer combo with the AC 2 plays great, to not have to worry about finding a good reed is worth the cost .
Good stuff Dr Wally. I’ve been a Legere convert ever since they came out with the Studio Cut, and I was happy to find the Signature and American cuts are even better. One thing to note for young students or adult students considering them - I found they are more sensitive to placement on the mouthpiece than a cane reed. Specifically, if you don’t get the reed up to where it covers all of the tip rail, the response goes out the window. Can reeds suffer from this too, obviously, but the Legeres just seem a little more finicky about precise reed placement.
I use Légère signature cut and love them. I’ve tried and quite liked carbon fiber. And bari synthetic, not soo much. And it’s interesting to know that the principal oboe of the Berlin Philharmonic uses Légère… so those instructors who disallow them are off base at the least. p.s. fyi I’m a 64 year old returning classical and jazz player
I'm playing an American Cut 2.25 on tenor now. It's quite good, but I like Silverstein's Alta Ambipolys better. Hard to put a finger on it, but it works better for me, all 'round. The American cut, is by far, the best Legere I've tried, and I've tried them all. I've literally been playing a 2 Jazz Alta on alto for 16 months with no degradation- practice and performance.
Great job (again) on this video. Thanks! I play all 4 main saxes (SATB) at least a couple of hours each day and, after trying a zillion different brands of cane and synthetic reeds, I eventually moved totally to Legere Signature (S/B) and American Cut (A/T) about a year ago. During that time, I chipped one and had two "die" out on me, but they've been amazingly consistent and durable. I love the dark edgy tone I can get. My only complaints: 1) I rotate 2-3 reeds per sax so I use reed guard/holders and the legere cases are a huge waste of plastic! 2) It's very expensive to try out multiple strengths when you use multiple horns and mouthpieces and their strength trade-in program is too limited to help much 3) the base of the American Cut is thicker so it doesn't always fit with all my favorite ligatures for cane reeds 4) in sound tests like yours, the signature has a bit too much brightness and buzz, the american cut is very smooth (Paul Desmond-like), while the cane seemed to be just a bit more alive with colorful harmonics. So, while I like the Legere for convenience, I'm still not 100% wow'ed by their tone.
@@drwallysax No recipe, but am super happy that you tried them and actually like them!!! They are a great option to cane. I agree with you about the cases, but they are new and I bet the good people at Legere will listen to your feedback. In the meanwhile, a sharpie works great!!!
I use Legere as an adult student. It lasts a long time, cost over the long run is less. It removes the variable as to whether I have a good or bad cane reed.
I love the Legere read, totally hooked, such a time saver, dont have to lick it wet it etc, just put on the mouthpiece and blow.Great over the whole range of the sax
Hi Dr Wally, it’s really reassuring to watch you agreeing with my own experience, that these Légère reeds are GREAT for adult amateurs with little time for fiddling about tweaking cane reeds. I bought good instruments to be sure that any shortcomings in the sound were down to me, but the cane reed was always an unhelpful variable. Légères are totally consistent. Also, I like to ‘double’ between sizes of sax, and a cane reed tends to dry out on the ‘dormant’ sax. I have had my Signatures for ever, but I preferred your sound on the American Cut, so I’ll certainly be giving them a whirl. Thanks for a great presentation of the pros and cons!
One thing worth noticing is that wood (including cane) is naturally antibacteric, but the plastic reed you better sometimes clean thoroughly, same as mouthpiece.
I switched finally a year ago to legere synthetic reeds. My reasons were the problem with the humidity on hot summer day outdoorconcerts and the easy switch between the instruments without worrying of dry out the reed. I tested a lot of synthetic reeds the past years but the Legere American Cut was the first on my Alto wich I liked. For now I play the American cut on Alto and Tenor and a Signature on Clarinet. 👍 Very cool reeds.
Great video, and as always I love your humour. I'm an adult learner and I use Legere American cut for the reason you mentioned - ability to fit a quick practice session in when I have a few moments spare without faffing around with a cane reed. Keep up the good work!
Reed my mind... The first legiere was practical because it didn't dry so when you came back after the brake it was working but Lipofaro Reed made you feel more happy when you made the right pick from the box. The new american cut is absolutely better its working and you have no excuses for not play and practice and you could trust the Reed and The sound is loud and clear but still a Great Lupifaro Reed makes you feel more romantik and happy. 😃🎷🎷
Wally, thanks for the video. I have struggled with reeds over the last year or so. I switched to Fibracell reeds back in I think 91? Little sketchy but they had not become readily available when I was hipped to them. Each time they changed their “formula” it drive me nuts. I’m a commercial R&B player who also is a lead vocalist. Picking up the horn in all environments getting the sound and performance from the reed each time is primo to me. Fibracell changed the game for me. Over the last year I have been disgruntled. I even called them and a nice lady told me to find another reed company…. Not interested. So I’ve been doing JUST THAT. I’ll bet I have spent a couple hundred on reeds looking for the right replacement. A buddy suggested the American Cut and I finally capitulated and bought one. From note one it has been fantastic. I do lots of session work both in sections and solos and i have been ultra happy. One thing in the Con side you didn’t discuss that I had to get used to. I play an old Link on my Tenor and when I use the American Cut I had to get used to a different sound behind the horn versus the one that is out front. When I play openly outside or in a room I hear a strangeness to my sound. Walk straight to a wall or using a sound shield and it goes away. I have recorded myself using my gear and I hear the weirdness going in (so I think) but the recording sounds EXACTLY like I want. I like you, have changed my mind and very happy to do so.
Yes! Take into account the following opinion is backed by my astonishing experience of 13 months as an alto sax player. Clearly, the highest reputed voice around. Anyway, I started on canes of course. Then I tried the "regular" Signature and it didn´t convince me at all, so I sticked to cane reeds. When the American Cut came out, I saw so many people praising it, that I tried it, and that was the a-ha moment for me. American cut are now my main reeds. I will happily admit I might sound a 1% or 2% better on a good cane reed. My gut feeling is that the sound might be a tad more flexible on a cane reed. None of those minimal differences justified my ordeal to keep my canes mould-free on the UK winter. Now 100% of my practice time is practice, and my hydrogen peroxide bottle is now lasting forever because I seldomly use it. Oh, BTW, when I bought the original Signature reed it had no plastic box at all, and THAT was an issue back then. From your video it looks like that´s been solved.
@@drwallysax the original Légère Signature reed had nowhere to hold the reed. Not even the cheap plastic holders from your isolated cane reeds, just the carton packaging. I ended up using a regular spare cane holder, but since Légère reeds are slightly longer it was a bad fit. This being said, I really like the American Cut plastic box. I respect a brand that learns from mistakes and strives for improvement.
I found that with my Rovner Optimum ligature the Legiere slipped off or to the side in the middle of playing. I roughened the surface of the reed that touched the ligature and it helped.
@@drwallysax I had to use a sharp craft knife and basically scraped parallel lines on the top of the reed (I didn’t touch anywhere the flat part touches the mouthpiece). I like them but this was an issue when a reed fell off as I was taking a solo in a big band !
I agree, Dr Wally I'm an older learner (18 months in) and I was fighting cane reeds and spending a lot of time tuning them rather than practicing. My son sent me a Legere Signature at the same strength as my cane reeds (2.5). It was too stiff and Legere has a one time replacement policy. You send them your original Legere and they send a replacement. I asked for an American cut 2.25 replacement and somehow got a Classic 2.5. Since Covid, they didn't want the old reed so I took it and dipped it in boiling water for 1 sec - 2 times. I didn't like the Classic as much. I've been loving it ever since (5 months) and my practice time has gone way up!
I as a doubler playing alto, tenor, soprano, baritone and flute i love these reeds! Always perfectly ready when you pick up the horn. Very good feature! I use all of these horns on almost every job. I like the American Cut!
I admit I was a little nervous well if I get the wrong read it’s a fair amount of money to toss out the window to use for a bookmark when I tried it I have to admit it was pretty easy to play and of course it was weird looking all in all though I have to say I did put it in my case I don’t like the case it comes in I found it hard to get it in and out of the case and I agree should be some kind of marking as to what the rate is so I just took a sharpie and wrote it on the outside so I can rememberI might buy one more but I’m not at the point where I’m ready to switch
I used a synthetic reed a few years back. It was irritatingly horrible. But I guess it’s not enough to write off the whole world of synthetic reed. Thanks for the video, I’ll do definitely try this one. Promise to keep an open mind 😊.
Excellent content as usual! I started playing Légère reeds about 4 months ago. I originally ordered the Signature 2.75 and 3.0. With their replacement policy I tried to swap the Signature 3.0 for the American 2.5. Due to COVID they sent the replacement but didn’t require a return. It arrived about the same time as my 56 and I’ve been playing the American, with the 56 and MO ligature on the regular. I still play cane reeds but the Légère is super consistent. Kind of the reed Chick-fil-A!😆 Thanks for all the great and creative content!!
Elliot!!!! You just made the best analogy on the internet! It's the Chick-fil-A of reeds! It's not the best, but it's ALWAYS good and you're never disappointed. You always know what you're getting! Well done my friend. How's the 56 treating you???
@@drwallysax I love the 56!! Plays easy through out the whole range of the horn with little adjustment to my embouchure. With some mouthpieces I find I have to adjust too much (player problem 😁) I really like the sound. Not to bright or contemporary. I enjoy a saxophone sound that sounds like a saxophone, not that there is anything wrong with a super bright reverbish sound but not my preference. I tried with it with the stock ligature then moved to the rovner then landed on the MO. I didn’t notice a lot of difference in the sound but the MO fits perfectly to me. Plus the old gold just looks super cool with the white 56! 😁
I'm liking the sound of the American Cut from this recording. Will be interesting to see what they sound like when you get in the studio. I like the idea of having a dependable synthetic back-up but don't think I'm ready to take the plunge yet. Shame we can't play-test the Légères!
I like my Legere reeds. Use it on my alto, tenor, and clarinet. One less thing to worry about. Also great when you double and triple on Instruments. The reed is ready to go when you pick up your horn to play after playing guitar for a few songs.
I started using a legere american cut 2.5 on my tenor and it's simply amazing, I get consistently a good tone, wether it's inside or outside. Hard for me to go back to cane honestly
Older relative newbie, thankfully found these early and believe I've practiced more simply because I was practicing not read geeking, or trimming. Yes it is far more economical over the long haul using Legere and each day I pick up my Sax(s) I have a good reed for many months.
I've been considering getting a Legere reed for a while, but finally chose to get one after your review. Got the soprano sax signature reed and I absolutely love it! Now time to get one for my alto...
@@michaeldezelar6264 Of course, you're right!!!! Good grief, Wally....get it together man.... I look forward to hearing the Gold etude - you got dis!!!!!
Légère American Cut are great. I always use them on my Alto with a JodyJazz DV NY 6. When playing cane reeds, for me the only alternative are Rigotti Jazz reeds.
One negative I have with synthetic reeds is that it can be expensive to find the right one for you. Reed comparison charts can be a bit sketchy meaning you could be stuck with a few that you can't use. But I do like them for the reasons you stated.
Legere do a reed exchange so if the strength doesn't suit they will swap it for a different strength. I had excellent service from them when I bought the wrong one. Absolutely no hassle
I play 2nd Alto in a concert band and have used Legere Classic, Signature, and American cuts. The product just keeps getting better and blending in with the rest of the section is not a problem. Playing outdoors is a no-brainer on Legere. Your comment on the AL3 is interesting. I still use Vandoren Blue Box for the best response on that mouthpiece.
I played saxophone as an amateur for almost 12 years and...stopped. I couldn't handle the reed cane stress anymore, never knowing if the reed or me was the problem when playing poorly. I'm going to buy one right now and who knows it will help me start playing again. If yes, I owe you this 😄
You're one of the good guys for certain. I'm currently playing a Legeres 1.75 American Cut. The 1st reed I ordered a 2.0 not American Cut didn't suit me at all, and Legeres offered to swap it free of charge, which was amazing and they said to keep the original one too. Impressive customer service.
I started playing (Alto) Saxophone last September. From the beginning I played on Légère reeds. For a few months on the Signature series, strength 2.0 and then for another few months on the American cut, also strength 2.0. I liked playing on the American cut more, however I can't give details anymore on why exactly. I had a pleasing experience with Légères at first. You can put them on your mouthpiece, are ready to go and they have a consistent and sound thats hard to distinguish or not at all distinguishable from cane reeds. But: They don't suck up humidity, and after some time of playing in a session I started to get a bubbly, watery sound. I had to take my reed off and give a quick wipe to it and the mouthpiece (the table of the mouthpiece was always completely wet, idk if that was bad) to get a clean sound again. I tested if I got this issue with the only both ligatues I own (the BG LD0 and the Jody Jazz Power Ring) that fit on my mouthpiece (Jody Jazz HR* Custom Dark 7 [please don't hate me for having bought these products as a beginner 😅]), made sure that they fit tight and I had it with both. I got annoyed by this and for about a month now I play on Boston Sax Shop custom reeds (cane), strength 2.5. With these -I don't have the issue of getting an unclean sound after some time anymore -The table of my mouthpiece is always completely dry after a playing session -I can play the F# that's right under the altissimo range no problem, with which I had difficulties with Légère reeds (this might be because of me going up half a size in strength, but I also tried 2.5 strength Légères and couldn't play on as easily) -I don't have any problem playing when starting a session, when they are still dry and not yet played in. Since I got cane reeds I only play on them anymore, even though I still like Légère reeds. Maybe the problem I had was not because of the reeds, but because I'm not an experienced player yet. Thanks a lot for this video Dr. Wally ^^ P.S. I first got a ReedGeek for the Boston Sax Shop reeds and only used it for them (I think it really improves them a lot), but Mauro Di Gioia , President/Founder of ReedGeek, Inc. has a video on UA-cam where he shows that ReedGeeks can also be used on Légère Reeds.
I have been using Legere for several years playing in a Concert band. After trying multiple mouthpieces I decided on the Selmer Concept which I really love. I now can spend my time practicing the repertoir rather than trying to make the reed work. I also often get praise on my tone quality, I know that does not entirely depend on the setup. The only issue is the condensation that builds up on the reed, that makes me have to wipe of the reed more often. But all in all, I will never change back to cane....
I had been using the American Cut since they came out, got used to the material, and now I really enjoy been able to work in the sound instead of adapting to the never ending changing reed temperament, the cane sometimes gives you more color" but if you compare I feel the Legere tends to be more even through the hole scale, leaving me to work in the sound I can produce, thank you for you great videos.
Used to buy 10 packs of LaVoz or Rico and find that a few never worked so the consistency of Legere is a plus but they do cost as much as five standard cane reeds so the longevity is really par for the cost. I've tried other synthetics - Fiberreed, Forestone, Fibracell but found that Legere are closest to cane sound.
I believe this is the exact same conversation people have about mouthpieces, in the sense that the main difference is in how the player perceives the sound and feel, never the listener.
One Giant Steps for man, one Lester Leaps In for Mankind.
Niiiice! Happy Monday, Jacob - hope your week is off to a great start!
I see what you did there
Doc, I think you missed one pro in your pros & cons list: for a developing player having a reed that gives you consistent feedback is truly a crucial advantage. With synthetics you have a fixed benchmark day after day and you see your improvements against that, rather than having to add to the equation the moodiness of your cane reed. For this reason alone I’ll never go back to cane…
Thanks for your vids! Competent, informative, no nonsense and way too funny for a music channel.
That's an EXCELLENT point! I'm learning Taekwondo with my son, I'm imagining how frustrating it would be if my uniform changed the way my kicks felt every time I practiced. That consistency is undoubtedly a game changer as well. I'm a fan of Legere now, obviously. Happy practicing !
@@drwallysax Tip for next vid: Taekwondo practice in space suits. Please?
@@MrSpock71 *rrrriiiiiippppp* ooops!
Great point! How I wished we had decent synthetics like this when I was starting out forming my embouchure back in the 90s. One less (big) variable to worry about.
I started clarinet at the end of February and it was the main reason I bought one early on and it's saved me tremendous time I was spending fiddling with cane reeds.
I tried a vandoren cane reed today for the first time in over a month and it was really nice, but as usual after like 20-30 mins of playing it started to feel thuddy. I don't know how to handle that as such a noob, so I switched back over to my Alta for my lesson.
Dr. Wally, I love you! Your videos are so good. Not only do you really know your shit, you are so funny, so lovably nerdy, and, as I realized after watching this video, you are really a phenomenal speaker! OMG! How do you rattle off all this information without ever stuttering, misspeaking, saying "uh" or "you know" all the time (like I do)??? I am a film teacher (day job) besides a saxophone player (hobby, weekend warrior) so I know a thing or two about video, and damn, you're so good! Your videos are well-paced, well shot, sound great, and maybe most importantly of all, always leave me feeling good, better than before I watched them. Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge with the world, encouraging other people, and genuinely taking pleasure in empowering others rather than showing off or demeaning others with your superior skill, wit, and intelligence (even though you could!). And wow, your glib, articulate delivery here is akin to someone playing note for note John Coltrane's amazing cadenza on "I Want to Talk About You" from memory. You are a treasure. Thank you so much for your great work, and if you ever have moments of self-doubt, please remember that there are people out here in Internetland who take great comfort from your work.
PS: I just ordered my first Legere reed! And I've been playing on and off for 50 years.
This means more to me than you might realize. I really appreciate these incredibly kind words. Thanks you my friend.
Dr. Wally I am a beginner "older" student on the saxophone and doing this as a "music" hobby and my instructor feels that when I brought the subject of using a SYNTHETIC reeds to cut cost of buy a lot of canes reeds he states that "beginner" sax players MUST use cane first and when I asked why he stated that it doesn't develop proper embouchure for playing. Well I have been playing now for a year and I have not had embouchure issues playing with Legere Synthetic reeds. I started with a size 2 and now I graduated to a size 2.75 and my instructor can't tell the difference. So I truly recommend that beginner sax players can start on synthetic reeds if they want to but also have the experience with cane reeds too.
I’m a high school band director. I’m also a middle school band director. I have also played in various ensembles which call for me to play a few doubles. As a performer I can’t recommend these enough. Which means(to me) that as a teacher I can’t recommend these enough to my students. Plain and simple. My beginning band students start on cane reeds and I introduce the plasticover reeds as an emergency reed. If they enjoy those then I suggest getting a Legere (signature or American) after they have settled on their reed strength. I demonstrate on occasion and they always ask “why do your reeds always just work no matter when you pick up your horn?” So, I tell them. Hope this helps.
Btw I’m a huge fan of the American cut! Something about that reinforced spine really works for me, however I did go down a 1/2 on strength instead of the 1/4 in comparison to my cane reeds (Rico Jazz Selects)
Welcome to the dark side!
Hey JD! Thanks so much for your perspective, it's exactly what I was looking for. Also, as a recovering middle school and high school band director - thanks for your service! It's a tough job, but has an immeasurable impact on young lives (as you know very well).
As for the dark side - when do I get my Sith robes and red sabre?
I'm late to the party, but I just picked sax up again after 30 years away. I've been wrestling with cane reeds since starting back and it's been really frustrating while trying to develop an embouchure again and find a reed, any reed, that I wasn't constantly tinkering with. WOWOWOWOW! Hello Legere American Cut! Where have you been all my life. I can slap that puppy on and actually work on playing, rather than fiddling with the stupid reed. Game changer! And I never would have tried if I hadn't seen your video, Dr. Wally, so thanks!
As a pro sax/clarinet player and teacher for over 50 years, one of the best features, which goes unsaid in your video, is for doublers. I can play a show or other performance, play on clarinet for 15 minutes, and pick up my alto without even worrying about whether the reed is dried out. I pick up my double and it just plays fine immediately-often its alto going to tenor- same reliable result. What a fantastic feature of the Legere reeds that I use on all my single reeds instruments! As you did cover, the weather situation is also totally eliminated- (except maybe for the temp of the surroundings, but that’s not the problem of the reed.)
Absolutely! I played in a pit orchestra for "Suessical" last summer and the Reed 2 book called for Oboe, Tenor, Clarinet, and Bass Clarinet. I covered all with Legere reeds and it is such a joy to just "pick up and play" without constant reed management. Now if I could just get Legere to ship their English Horn reeds my world would be complete.
Absolutlely. I play baritone sax with a Daddario Select Jazz unfiled 3S cane reed in a big band and double on bass clarinet using a Légère European Cut 2.5, which has more depth than the Signature Légère Reed. I also keep a baritone sax Légère American Cut 2.75 in my case and at time for playing home. Finally, I will definitely try a Bb clarinet Légère French Cut after.
And I amso bought Légère soft oboe reed. Some concertists use them!
Sold. I just ordered one.
Your friends must really love you to put that spacesuit on XD
I'm a good saxophonist. I'm a very good teacher. My superpower: I can talk really smart people into doing really stupid $%#@.
Happy Monday, Kevin!
You are covering all the points Doctor. I am a pro player with over 60 records ( jazz) and hundreds of jingle dates, shows, you name it.I am an old guy now and don´t tour any more. The last four years I was touring
and recording (Jazz) I went over to Legere Signature on Tenor; Alto and Soprano and my stress level went
to zero. The guys i was touring with asked " Bob, you are so much more relaxed on the gigs now. What´s going on? And I said " I´m playing on reeds that work every night, every set." I rotated them, wrote the number of how many gigs or sessions i used them on. Some mouthpieces are better with them than others. Now I am not touring and I have plenty of time to work on cane and enjoy the many nuances
available with cane. It´s a hobby in a way. Legere were really good for me and I recorded some serious
music on them and was very happy with the result. If I have an accident with a Legere, it is more expensive than a cane reed. Glad you addressed this issue. Can I get the space suits on Amazon? No one could hear i was play a synthetic reed.
Love the perspective of a pro, thanks Bob! They don't have official Sononaut space suits on Amazon!!! That's crazy!!!
@@drwallysax Well I had my heart set on having my band, " The Vibration Society " suited up! But I will find them somewhere. Sononaut!
Thumbs up, and I've only watched the space man jazz intro so far.
3D printed mouthpiece using a synthetic reed while wearing a space suit. Yup I’m at the right channel.
Great review Dr. Wally.
Video uploaded and comment by WallyBot 3000. Thank you for compliment human. Now. Go. Pratice. beep boop beep boop
I play Alto in two concert bands and now only
use the Legere American Cut reed in
conjunction with the Claude Delange
mouthpiece.
I love the tone I get from the reeds.
More importantly after we take rehearsal or
gig breaks I don’t need to re-wet the reed.
They are ready to play straight away.
I love the consistency of the reeds and the
longevity. The quarter strengths allow me
to precisely select the reed for the
mouthpiece being used.
I do find the reeds soften slightly over time.
Lots of variables in saxophone tone. The list is daunting. Like the blade of grass, the primal people honed a tonal palette that stresses the individual tonal variants. Then man invented recording systems that featured the reed/blade nuances. The saxophone tone is modeled in schools and then the 'individual' becomes the artist. Though never 'perfect' long live the variant tones of the saxophone.
Bought one after this and wow 26 pounds for one reed but this has given me such a boost. Thank you just what the Doctor ordered.
As a former "Pro" player and teacher who is now trying to get his chops back, I had my doubts due to the number of synthetic reeds I tried in the 80s and 90s. all of those, besides sounding like an electric razor stuck on high, left a bad taste in my mouth...literally! Since I have returned to a regular, as much as I can, schedule of practicing and hoperully gigging soon, I have taken an interest in Legere. I am primarily an alto player and Bari, but often do Tenor and soprano along with Clarinet. Having a good sounding/playing/tasting/feeling synthetic reed would take a lot of the concern I have while doubling. Your rough play testing today really showed how close these American Cut reeds sounded like a good cane reed! The sound was very very similar with just a hint of buzziness, if that is a word. The Signature cut sounded like a reed that was nearing the end of it's lifespan but still sounded better than many cane reeds out of a box. I like the idea of just pulling my alto off the stand and playing when I fit in my 20 minutes of practicing in betweenn work, chores, life! As for when a student should use one.... I would have to say when that student shows enough responsiblity with his cane reeds to understand the need to be careful with the synthetic. So That may be a shifty answer, but not all students are as responcible as another. If you need a year in schooling, Probably late Middle School to High School. You video, and others, have piqued my curiostiy. I will give a few a try and let you know my impressions. Now, I better go practice before Dr. Wallace yells at me again lol
Thanks for your perspective, and I agree Brian! There is a buzziness, not unpleasant, but buzzier? Also agree with late middle to high school as a starter point. But this is all of course to say: GO PRACTICE!
Dr. Wally, as a 50 year sax veteran I was skeptical about the Legere reeds per my comments 7 months ago. However, 6 months ago I switched from a hard rubber Morgan Excalibur 6* to a Jody Jazz DV 7. That significantly improved my tone, intonation and ease of altissimo while still using D'Addario 4S filed reeds. However, I was still having some harmonic overtones coming out in altissimo A, Bb and B. So Jan 15th I move up to a Jody Jazz DV7*. I also bought a couple of Legere Signature reeds, in 3.00 and 3.25 strengths. Bingo... the 3.25 turned out to be the perfect reed for me. Excellent in all registers. I am very happy now. I can now focus my frustrations elsewhere. No more cane reeds for me. Consistency is the key... This reed works in the recording studio as well, even with my high end ribbon mic (AEA R84). I highly recommend the Legere reeds. Also get two so you can rotate them.
Wow. I mean. WOW! For a long time (I started on tenor in 1973 -in 8th grade) I discounted the notion of even thinking about playing one of “those plastic reeds.” Over time I’ve started playing alto in my church worship team.. A month ago I got serious, bit the bullet and bought a Legere American Cut 2.5, 2.25, and 2.00. Gotta say that I was immediately impressed, blown away (insert your favorite adjective here) by the response that the 2.25 gave me! Dumbfounded.
I do believe that beginners should have a good cane reed foundation, but instructors should be open-minded about synthetics! My low register opened up, I was able to play low C mp … I am a definite 63 yr old convert! LOL
Doc - Always enjoy your reviews and all the amazing content you provide on the web (for free, no less).
I use Legere American Cut on alto and tenor, about 1/2 strength below what I normally use for cane. Two things I like:
1. Every time I pick up the horn to practice, it's ready to go. No time wasted fussing with a cane reed or wondering if the problem is with the reed or me. (it's me)
2. If you're playing a gig with multiple horns, you can leave a horn on the stand, pick it up 1/2 way the second set and it responds like you just warmed it up. No surprises.
Very much agree, happy Saturday William!
Band Director here, Brass Specialist. I LOVE these reeds!! I love the fact that my kids can go from playing inside with AC to outside in the Florida humidity and not worry about their reeds. I’ve told my kids these are required for Marching Band!!
Thanks Scott!! Even as a saxophone nerd, these seem like a no-brainer for marching band and many other uses. I remember playing at a conference at UF - man the humidity!! What part of Florida are you teaching? (and thanks for the input)
Of the two Legere’s I clearly prefer the American Cut. Thanks.
I think I agree, Zelde!
i have been using a 3.25 sig cut on my AL3 for all my college playing and it works for me lol
I really enjoy your channel. As a repair tech I use synthetic reads exclusively to test instruments after repair. That way I eliminate a variable in test playing. By the way, a professional musician is one that has made more than they have spent on their gear when they die.
Ha! I agree Don, that seems like an accurate definition!
I've found this very helpful, especially as you have long been a confirmed cane person and also you are a very skilled professional. I as an adult beginner to intermediate level have found Legere Signature especially good, but felt guilty as there is still a feeling they're not the REAL THING that a TRUE saxophone player would use. It's part of saxophone lore that you should learn how to select and use saxophone reeds if you aspire to being a PROPER sax player, even though I do not really feel up to it or know quite how to go about it. That can increases stress and self doubt and this removes one key aspect of discouragement. I suspect encouraging beginners to at least try a Legere (not any old synthetic reed) alongside a cane one, and NOT FEEL GUILTY ABOUT IT would enable many more to stay the course. It's very confirming indeeed that you like them, even saying you may switch. Thanks Wally I love your sage advice and good sense of humour in equal measure.
Dr Wally, I am now almost £90 poorer having bought American cut for Tenor and Alto, plus Euro cut on Bass Clarinet. These reeds are superb and perfect for me with limited practice time.
Some additional comments from a professional since 1976 ... I have played Legere' (signature initially) and now American for the past (maybe can't remember)) 10 years. Response to your cons ... 1. they don't break very easily ... I have rubbed, scratched etc. reeds many times and they just don't break (at least I have never had one) .. so for high school kids I think they would be a fantastic alternative ... 2. The case thing solved ... I bought a LaVoz reed guard (4 reeds) and keep four Legere' reeds in it. I rotate the reeds (as they all play the same) and it is easy to see the strength if you use different strengths (I don't) ... If you play different mouthpieces I would purchase an additional reed guard. Beside that ... The greatest pro is they all play the same every time... no fussing, no wetting (actually used Bourbon years ago) and in outdoor climates like Central Florida .. they are never affected by humidity. For me as a working pro, just knowing when I put the horn together that I will know exactly what the sound coming out will be every time is the greatest advantage. Also, it seems as if they don't wear out .... at least not for years if you take care of them ... And lastly as with any reed or mouthpiece over time if you practice and play enough on them, you adapt to the subtle nuisances to the point that I have never had any fellow professional complain about my sound (and there are many excellent players in the Central Florida area) ... I have actually convinced a few stogy ones to switch.
I have watched many of your Saxophone Academy lessons and have learned tidbits that I used when I taught students and now in my performances. I have used legere reeds for 4+ years and run into many professional musicians that criticize my use of “plastic” reeds. I enjoyed this reinforcement that I can now use in my responses. I rotate all my reeds and still have my first legere reed that has been used over 4 years.
First of all, I LOVE your videos. You're extremely knowledgeable, and the way you present your content is entertaining and super enjoyable to listen to.
Secondly, I recently made the switch to Legere on all three of my horns (soprano, alto, and tenor). I'm NEVER going to look back.
I've always been ultra picky with cane reeds, and the inconsistency from reed to reed within a single box has always driven me MAD. Reeds have been 31 years of Hell for me in conjunction with the 31 years of Heaven I've experienced playing the saxophone. Legere is the savior I've always needed. 😂
With that being said, I do feel like I sacrifice a TINY bit of sound on alto and tenor, but that's only when compared to a GOOD cane reed. It's a small price to pay for consistency, and frankly....better mental health. 😂
On soprano, though? No lie, I've NEVER played a cane reed that sounds better than my Legere Signature. I feel like my current setup on soprano, including my Legere, has unlocked my peak soprano playing.
Granted, I'm not a SUPER skilled soprano player, so that's probably like being the valedictorian of Summer School. 😂
I am primarily a flute player (cuban style), but am also asked to play reeds. I have ben using Legere for the last 4 yrs. and love them. For clarinet, the European cut is great. Have been using the American cut on tenor and alto. Have started to use the French cut on tenor with good results, darker sound.
I live in Toronto. In summer I use cane on clarinet, sax and bassoon. Desember to March or thereabouts, I use Legere: summer concerts outdoors, Legere. 10 of my D'Addarios cost the same as one Legere.Now I keep the Legeres in the packaging they came in. The Legere Bassoon reed is the bomb but cleaning is a bugger.
Ohhhhh, cleaning expensive bassoon reeds. That does sound like a "bugger." Buggers are bad, right?
@@drwallysax Vinegar and baking soda for de-bugging, Never coffee!
Don't tell Jay this but... I think this channel is better than better sax... its the best sax.
Our secret ;)
I used one in college and my saxophone professor was pretty neutral. He didn’t recommend them, but he also didn’t say I couldn’t use them. He left the decision up to me to explore and to see how it worked for me. I honestly love playing them because they’re so responsive and consistent and purchasing one that is on point especially after you find the one that is perfect vs having to sift through a box of ten cane reeds and only finding one or two that work is in my opinion a better investment. Not only that but synthetic reeds are moving up in the ranks due to the improvements in their design and the different cuts. Hence, I see them becoming a normal thing and cane will still be available but not for the faint of time to break them in. Great video and info as always Dr. WW! God bless!
Having a reed that just plays is just so useful for me. As a teacher of woodwinds I'll have several reed instruments on their stands ready to play. With the legere I just pick up the instrument and play no time wasted preparing my instrument in the students lesson. They are a gift for the doubler.
As a doubler, you need all the help you can get! I can't imagine doubling and trying to keep 3-5 reeds working at a time!
Dr. Wally: Very popular topic. You play so well. After listening 3 times I would range the tone quality as cane no1, am. cut no 2 and the signature reed on 3. I think I can hear little of the plastic sound on the signature in the upper register, but doesn't disturb me much. Because of the time to search for a good read (and lack of carpenter skills) I was happy to start on synthetic reeds many years ago and heard no complain about the tone. The way we play are more important, I guess. After some time the synth reed will be bent and a little changed, but not as quickly as cane. If you play not more than an hour a day the synth reed can last for years. Also I think the Legere reeds with the same number are not completely equal, but way better than cane reeds.
Warning: If you buy on the net, be careful. If too cheap maybe fake Legere. I bought once for alto. Thank you for the nice test performance.
I'm classically trained, been playing for 40 years - now playing rock, blues, and a bit of jazz (my stretch goal!). Our prof in university back in the 80s was a Vandoren player 100%. 6 years ago I tried Legere - best thing that ever happened to me, never going back! All the reasons you mention are bang on - especially removing the reed variable - that's a HUGE plus, timewise and psychologically lol. Leger is based in a town not far from where I live in Toronto - I'm extremely proud of this Canadian success story. I've had to experiment with my style and strength several times - and every time I've used their exchange policy, they've been 100% supportive (even with some dialogue via email to help me decide). Currently looking at the Tenor American Cut 2.75 (quarter strengths rule!) I bought yesterday - took it out of the box and played a gig last night, no problemo. I agree with you on the case. In fact I wish they would not include a case and reduce the price. They should re-design the case for 4 reeds and sell it separately, so we only buy it once. If only I had these reeds 30 years ago.
Im 68 and just picked up the sax 5 years ago. I have never played an instrument so at my age every minute of practice counts. My biggest frustration with the sax was the reeds, too wet, too dry, always an issue when I wanted to practice. I started using Legere a few years ago and it solved my problem but I felt guilty not playing on cane. I thought every good player needed to play on a cane reed.
I'm over that now and enjoy using the Legere American Cut.
Thanks for this video Dr Wally, excellent!
Legere Signature is just fantastic for me and consistent with my Morgan Excalibur 6L and Oleg Ligature without the frustration of cane reeds. Very rich sound with my vintage Buescher alto. Like Dr. Wally says, lets me focus on playing and practice and take breaks without the reed drying out.
I've been playing on Legere for ~3 years and never looked back. I have 4 that I keep in rotation and. I have only had one "fail" on me (which was the original one that I bought when I switched. The use cases for doublers, "international" gigers, marching performers, wedding musicians- There are just too many practical use cases that are common.
Synthetics are not the same as they were in 2008 and i think some musicians and educators are bias toward the early days of synthetics when they were trying to figure them out.
I would recommend them 100% to my students, which I already do.
The only thing that I think is important is making sure you find the right strength that fits you best. It took me a decent amount of trial and error until I settled on stength. That is something that I could see as a barrier but the return/exchange policy is pretty amazing.
I was thinking about taking the plunge for going synthetic so thanks for the review Doc.
A “Chamber Crawl?” That is some super geeky music stuff right there! Love it! I need to attend one of these to watch! Great review. Just bought a legiere reed after having bought a couple about a decade ago…the modern ones are soooo much better. Really like the product.
Band director/saxophonist here. I love the Legere Signature reeds for classical. My friends and I always found that they work especially well for the lower horns. They’re also great for when you’re teaching a lesson/class and your horns sit in the stand for a long time. Doesn’t matter if they dry out: still works!
I don’t recommend them until the student is at the high school level. By then, most all of them have learned to respect the reed tip.
I play other instruments on gigs and will often put my horn down for 30-45 minutes a time. I switched to synthetic for this and it’s been awesome. Reed is always ready to go.
I noticed they do get soft over time and they do not last forever.
I looked away from the video when you started playing. My reaction to the 3.25 had a WOW! factor to the sound.
Good Wow, or bad wow? 😂
I take no offense either way!
@@drwallysax Sorry! Good WOW! The 3.5 was a bit bright and edgy for my personal taste. When I heard the 3.25 I thought you went back to the Vandoren but a better reed than the first.
I’ve been using them for years in my band. In the studio and on stage, they’ve never let me down.
I've been impressed - and I'm super late to the party :0
Great insight on the Legere reed. I’m a winery, pub saxophonist that have to setup all my equipment, lighting, and sound. I don’t have as must time to fuss with reed wetting or how it’s playing. The Legere reed is alway ready to go for a three hour show. Thanks for the unbiased review.
You're the exact perfect person for them! Someone who's out playing in public with more to worry about than finding the right cane reed!
I’m a high school student and these have taken over-a huge portion of saxophonists and clarinetists have started using them, including myself. They eliminate a lot of the immature squeaks and squeals that characterize high school bands.
Yes I have legere Alto reed 2.5 I love playing it, I play brass band marrage shows, event gigs in India Mumbai, feel comfortable playing with the reed.
I used to teach quite a bit. Legere was a product I recommended pretty strongly to my beginning students, and anyone who wasn't studying or performing music full-time. I stick to natural products for gigging, recording ETC, but I'm perfectly comfortable using Legere for auditions, lessons, big band work ETC. I do notice a little buzz on the American cut Legere tenor sax 3 and 1/2 strength, but other than that, no issues with sound. I've played Legere products in so-called synthetic only bands, and nobody ever noticed a difference in my playing.
Thanks for the insight, very much agree with your assessment.
I purchased the Legere AT signature reed. I am impressed with the sound and how it keep its consistency..
Glad you like it!
I just LOVE them! Simple as that! I remember to freak out in my graduation gig because my special reed that I played just one time a week to save it for the end of the month simply didn't work the way it should because of the weather that day! A nightmare!!
Yup, they definitely remove the panic feeling knowing you have them as backup!
I switched to Légere on all of my saxes. It is very convenient not to suck on them 5 min before you start to play. And, this is the biggest advantage, If it sounds crappy, i' m sure it's me and not the reed 😄. Playin' A-cut in Alto. Signature in Bari Tenor and Soprano
In my humble opinion . Your sound on cane is the true sound of an alto saxophone. Gorgeous. However I need to try the plastic considering the pros. Thx for the video. Looking forward to your video in recording studio.
The American cut sounds more pleasant than the signature cut. Both sound brighter than the cane but the signature cut seems to have a nasal quality to it. I own a signature one that I have been using for a while now. Will definitely buy the American cut to try with my WCW mouthpiece. Shout-out to WCW!!
Good ears, CJ! When I do the more in-depth comparison - the signature sounds VEEERY good on my classical mouthpiece. Happy Monday - WCW represent!
Have started playing again after many years of being stagnate. So stagnate that I'd never heard of synthetic reeds until today!! Glad I came across this video!! I was having trouble with the lower notes and was happy that you said that playing a Legere reed can make ALL the difference on being able to play low notes better. ❤️ your tone when you play the Legere American Cut synthetic reed. Just ordered one!!! Cain't wait to start playing on it.
Chelsa, this makes me so happy, thank you! So glad you're playing again, be sure to hit me up with questions and take advantage of all our great free stuff on the website!
In watching your Video , I found the American cut responded extremely close as possible to a cane reed have to say I was impressed by the Presentation by the doctor
Thanks friend, hope you have a wonderful weekend!
Doc the Legere American cut reeds are even better than the signatures, I think they have a sound and feel that lends itself to a jazz sound. I use a Jody Jazz HR 7* on Tenor with a 2 AC and the only con I can find is it's to bright, I just picked up a 56 from Windy City last month a killer combo with the AC 2 plays great, to not have to worry about finding a good reed is worth the cost .
Good stuff Dr Wally. I’ve been a Legere convert ever since they came out with the Studio Cut, and I was happy to find the Signature and American cuts are even better.
One thing to note for young students or adult students considering them - I found they are more sensitive to placement on the mouthpiece than a cane reed. Specifically, if you don’t get the reed up to where it covers all of the tip rail, the response goes out the window. Can reeds suffer from this too, obviously, but the Legeres just seem a little more finicky about precise reed placement.
Yeah, observed that as well. Good Info!
I use Légère signature cut and love them. I’ve tried and quite liked carbon fiber. And bari synthetic, not soo much. And it’s interesting to know that the principal oboe of the Berlin Philharmonic uses Légère… so those instructors who disallow them are off base at the least. p.s. fyi I’m a 64 year old returning classical and jazz player
Very much agree.
I'm playing an American Cut 2.25 on tenor now. It's quite good, but I like Silverstein's Alta Ambipolys better. Hard to put a finger on it, but it works better for me, all 'round. The American cut, is by far, the best Legere I've tried, and I've tried them all. I've literally been playing a 2 Jazz Alta on alto for 16 months with no degradation- practice and performance.
Great job (again) on this video. Thanks! I play all 4 main saxes (SATB) at least a couple of hours each day and, after trying a zillion different brands of cane and synthetic reeds, I eventually moved totally to Legere Signature (S/B) and American Cut (A/T) about a year ago. During that time, I chipped one and had two "die" out on me, but they've been amazingly consistent and durable. I love the dark edgy tone I can get. My only complaints: 1) I rotate 2-3 reeds per sax so I use reed guard/holders and the legere cases are a huge waste of plastic! 2) It's very expensive to try out multiple strengths when you use multiple horns and mouthpieces and their strength trade-in program is too limited to help much 3) the base of the American Cut is thicker so it doesn't always fit with all my favorite ligatures for cane reeds 4) in sound tests like yours, the signature has a bit too much brightness and buzz, the american cut is very smooth (Paul Desmond-like), while the cane seemed to be just a bit more alive with colorful harmonics. So, while I like the Legere for convenience, I'm still not 100% wow'ed by their tone.
Points WELL taken, Pat! Appreciate your feedback my friend!
dang. now I wanna try one of those reeds.
nice.
Thank you for the review!
I have played the signature for a while. I am happy with it, also because I can clean it well.
I do like the easy cleaning aspect!
Yes! this is definitely a bonus. I wash mine with soap and water each time I have finished playing it. No probs.
Yes!!! Haha... I knew you'd like them!!!
You uh, got a good recipe for humble pie?
@@drwallysax No recipe, but am super happy that you tried them and actually like them!!! They are a great option to cane. I agree with you about the cases, but they are new and I bet the good people at Legere will listen to your feedback. In the meanwhile, a sharpie works great!!!
@@julielv5300 We might have discussed it a bit in our Zoom call ;)
Hope you're having a great week!
I use Legere as an adult student. It lasts a long time, cost over the long run is less. It removes the variable as to whether I have a good or bad cane reed.
I love the Legere read, totally hooked, such a time saver, dont have to lick it wet it etc, just put on the mouthpiece and blow.Great over the whole range of the sax
Hi Dr Wally, it’s really reassuring to watch you agreeing with my own experience, that these Légère reeds are GREAT for adult amateurs with little time for fiddling about tweaking cane reeds. I bought good instruments to be sure that any shortcomings in the sound were down to me, but the cane reed was always an unhelpful variable. Légères are totally consistent. Also, I like to ‘double’ between sizes of sax, and a cane reed tends to dry out on the ‘dormant’ sax. I have had my Signatures for ever, but I preferred your sound on the American Cut, so I’ll certainly be giving them a whirl. Thanks for a great presentation of the pros and cons!
I love Legere reeds
They've won me over - tremendous tool for players.
One thing worth noticing is that wood (including cane) is naturally antibacteric, but the plastic reed you better sometimes clean thoroughly, same as mouthpiece.
'wood is naturally antibacteric' sounds like bollocks to me.
I briefly used Legere #3 on bari when rehearsing with a big band, changing back and forth with Rico Reeds but prefer Ricos on Tenor and Alto.
I switched finally a year ago to legere synthetic reeds. My reasons were the problem with the humidity on hot summer day outdoorconcerts and the easy switch between the instruments without worrying of dry out the reed. I tested a lot of synthetic reeds the past years but the Legere American Cut was the first on my Alto wich I liked. For now I play the American cut on Alto and Tenor and a Signature on Clarinet. 👍
Very cool reeds.
Great video, and as always I love your humour.
I'm an adult learner and I use Legere American cut for the reason you mentioned - ability to fit a quick practice session in when I have a few moments spare without faffing around with a cane reed.
Keep up the good work!
Reed my mind... The first legiere was practical because it didn't dry so when you came back after the brake it was working but Lipofaro Reed made you feel more happy when you made the right pick from the box. The new american cut is absolutely better its working and you have no excuses for not play and practice and you could trust the Reed and The sound is loud and clear but still a Great Lupifaro Reed makes you feel more romantik and happy. 😃🎷🎷
Wally, thanks for the video. I have struggled with reeds over the last year or so. I switched to Fibracell reeds back in I think 91? Little sketchy but they had not become readily available when I was hipped to them. Each time they changed their “formula” it drive me nuts. I’m a commercial R&B player who also is a lead vocalist. Picking up the horn in all environments getting the sound and performance from the reed each time is primo to me. Fibracell changed the game for me. Over the last year I have been disgruntled. I even called them and a nice lady told me to find another reed company…. Not interested. So I’ve been doing JUST THAT. I’ll bet I have spent a couple hundred on reeds looking for the right replacement. A buddy suggested the American Cut and I finally capitulated and bought one. From note one it has been fantastic. I do lots of session work both in sections and solos and i have been ultra happy. One thing in the Con side you didn’t discuss that I had to get used to. I play an old Link on my Tenor and when I use the American Cut I had to get used to a different sound behind the horn versus the one that is out front. When I play openly outside or in a room I hear a strangeness to my sound. Walk straight to a wall or using a sound shield and it goes away. I have recorded myself using my gear and I hear the weirdness going in (so I think) but the recording sounds EXACTLY like I want. I like you, have changed my mind and very happy to do so.
That's great, thanks for the perspective Mark!
Yes! Take into account the following opinion is backed by my astonishing experience of 13 months as an alto sax player. Clearly, the highest reputed voice around. Anyway, I started on canes of course. Then I tried the "regular" Signature and it didn´t convince me at all, so I sticked to cane reeds. When the American Cut came out, I saw so many people praising it, that I tried it, and that was the a-ha moment for me. American cut are now my main reeds. I will happily admit I might sound a 1% or 2% better on a good cane reed. My gut feeling is that the sound might be a tad more flexible on a cane reed. None of those minimal differences justified my ordeal to keep my canes mould-free on the UK winter. Now 100% of my practice time is practice, and my hydrogen peroxide bottle is now lasting forever because I seldomly use it.
Oh, BTW, when I bought the original Signature reed it had no plastic box at all, and THAT was an issue back then. From your video it looks like that´s been solved.
Appreciate the perspective, Javier! What was the issue with the original packaging? not secure enough? Or just nowhere to hold the red?
@@drwallysax the original Légère Signature reed had nowhere to hold the reed. Not even the cheap plastic holders from your isolated cane reeds, just the carton packaging. I ended up using a regular spare cane holder, but since Légère reeds are slightly longer it was a bad fit. This being said, I really like the American Cut plastic box. I respect a brand that learns from mistakes and strives for improvement.
I found that with my Rovner Optimum ligature the Legiere slipped off or to the side in the middle of playing. I roughened the surface of the reed that touched the ligature and it helped.
Stewart, that's smart man! I did notice a lil' bit more of ligature slip when tuning.
@@drwallysax I had to use a sharp craft knife and basically scraped parallel lines on the top of the reed (I didn’t touch anywhere the flat part touches the mouthpiece). I like them but this was an issue when a reed fell off as I was taking a solo in a big band !
I agree, Dr Wally
I'm an older learner (18 months in) and I was fighting cane reeds and spending a lot of time tuning them rather than practicing. My son sent me a Legere Signature at the same strength as my cane reeds (2.5). It was too stiff and Legere has a one time replacement policy. You send them your original Legere and they send a replacement. I asked for an American cut 2.25 replacement and somehow got a Classic 2.5. Since Covid, they didn't want the old reed so I took it and dipped it in boiling water for 1 sec - 2 times. I didn't like the Classic as much.
I've been loving it ever since (5 months) and my practice time has gone way up!
That's fantastic! I think you're a perfect example of why they're such a great product for many.
I as a doubler playing alto, tenor, soprano, baritone and flute i love these reeds! Always perfectly ready when you pick up the horn. Very good feature! I use all of these horns on almost every job. I like the American Cut!
I admit I was a little nervous well if I get the wrong read it’s a fair amount of money to toss out the window to use for a bookmark when I tried it I have to admit it was pretty easy to play and of course it was weird looking all in all though I have to say I did put it in my case I don’t like the case it comes in I found it hard to get it in and out of the case and I agree should be some kind of marking as to what the rate is so I just took a sharpie and wrote it on the outside so I can rememberI might buy one more but I’m not at the point where I’m ready to switch
I used a synthetic reed a few years back. It was irritatingly horrible. But I guess it’s not enough to write off the whole world of synthetic reed. Thanks for the video, I’ll do definitely try this one. Promise to keep an open mind 😊.
Very happy with the Legere Signature cut for classical clarinet work; really don't use cane reeds much at all now.
Excellent content as usual! I started playing Légère reeds about 4 months ago. I originally ordered the Signature 2.75 and 3.0. With their replacement policy I tried to swap the Signature 3.0 for the American 2.5. Due to COVID they sent the replacement but didn’t require a return. It arrived about the same time as my 56 and I’ve been playing the American, with the 56 and MO ligature on the regular. I still play cane reeds but the Légère is super consistent. Kind of the reed Chick-fil-A!😆 Thanks for all the great and creative content!!
Elliot!!!! You just made the best analogy on the internet! It's the Chick-fil-A of reeds! It's not the best, but it's ALWAYS good and you're never disappointed. You always know what you're getting! Well done my friend.
How's the 56 treating you???
@@drwallysax I love the 56!! Plays easy through out the whole range of the horn with little adjustment to my embouchure. With some mouthpieces I find I have to adjust too much (player problem 😁) I really like the sound. Not to bright or contemporary. I enjoy a saxophone sound that sounds like a saxophone, not that there is anything wrong with a super bright reverbish sound but not my preference. I tried with it with the stock ligature then moved to the rovner then landed on the MO. I didn’t notice a lot of difference in the sound but the MO fits perfectly to me. Plus the old gold just looks super cool with the white 56! 😁
I'm liking the sound of the American Cut from this recording. Will be interesting to see what they sound like when you get in the studio.
I like the idea of having a dependable synthetic back-up but don't think I'm ready to take the plunge yet.
Shame we can't play-test the Légères!
Agreed, that's why I put it off for so long Alexadra :)
I like my Legere reeds. Use it on my alto, tenor, and clarinet. One less thing to worry about. Also great when you double and triple on Instruments. The reed is ready to go when you pick up your horn to play after playing guitar for a few songs.
I started using a legere american cut 2.5 on my tenor and it's simply amazing, I get consistently a good tone, wether it's inside or outside. Hard for me to go back to cane honestly
Great review Dr Wallace.
Hope all is well.
Great video! Very helpful. Your tone is actually MUCH better on the real cane reed.
Older relative newbie, thankfully found these early and believe I've practiced more simply because I was practicing not read geeking, or trimming.
Yes it is far more economical over the long haul using Legere and each day I pick up my Sax(s) I have a good reed for many months.
I've been considering getting a Legere reed for a while, but finally chose to get one after your review. Got the soprano sax signature reed and I absolutely love it! Now time to get one for my alto...
That's become a remarkably familiar tune in the last couple of weeks!
No kidding!
Good! I'd be mad if you didn't recognize it!
@@michaeldezelar6264 Blue represent!!!
@@drwallysax I thought I heard Silver... and truth be told (and against my better judgement), I've been working the gold level. 😳
@@michaeldezelar6264 Of course, you're right!!!! Good grief, Wally....get it together man....
I look forward to hearing the Gold etude - you got dis!!!!!
Légère American Cut are great. I always use them on my Alto with a JodyJazz DV NY 6. When playing cane reeds, for me the only alternative are Rigotti Jazz reeds.
Have you compared Rigotti to Boston Sax Shop? Was curious to know how similar/different they were?
One negative I have with synthetic reeds is that it can be expensive to find the right one for you. Reed comparison charts can be a bit sketchy meaning you could be stuck with a few that you can't use. But I do like them for the reasons you stated.
Legere do a reed exchange so if the strength doesn't suit they will swap it for a different strength. I had excellent service from them when I bought the wrong one. Absolutely no hassle
Amazon as well.
I play 2nd Alto in a concert band and have used Legere Classic, Signature, and American cuts. The product just keeps getting better and blending in with the rest of the section is not a problem. Playing outdoors is a no-brainer on Legere. Your comment on the AL3 is interesting. I still use Vandoren Blue Box for the best response on that mouthpiece.
I played saxophone as an amateur for almost 12 years and...stopped. I couldn't handle the reed cane stress anymore, never knowing if the reed or me was the problem when playing poorly. I'm going to buy one right now and who knows it will help me start playing again. If yes, I owe you this 😄
You're one of the good guys for certain. I'm currently playing a Legeres 1.75 American Cut. The 1st reed I ordered a 2.0 not American Cut didn't suit me at all, and Legeres offered to swap it free of charge, which was amazing and they said to keep the original one too. Impressive customer service.
hi!! how did you ask for a swap?
I started playing (Alto) Saxophone last September. From the beginning I played on Légère reeds. For a few months on the Signature series, strength 2.0 and then for another few months on the American cut, also strength 2.0.
I liked playing on the American cut more, however I can't give details anymore on why exactly.
I had a pleasing experience with Légères at first. You can put them on your mouthpiece, are ready to go and they have a consistent and sound thats hard to distinguish or not at all distinguishable from cane reeds.
But: They don't suck up humidity, and after some time of playing in a session I started to get a bubbly, watery sound. I had to take my reed off and give a quick wipe to it and the mouthpiece (the table of the mouthpiece was always completely wet, idk if that was bad) to get a clean sound again. I tested if I got this issue with the only both ligatues I own (the BG LD0 and the Jody Jazz Power Ring) that fit on my mouthpiece (Jody Jazz HR* Custom Dark 7 [please don't hate me for having bought these products as a beginner 😅]), made sure that they fit tight and I had it with both.
I got annoyed by this and for about a month now I play on Boston Sax Shop custom reeds (cane), strength 2.5.
With these
-I don't have the issue of getting an unclean sound after some time anymore
-The table of my mouthpiece is always completely dry after a playing session
-I can play the F# that's right under the altissimo range no problem, with which I had difficulties with Légère reeds (this might be because of me going up half a size in strength, but I also tried 2.5 strength Légères and couldn't play on as easily)
-I don't have any problem playing when starting a session, when they are still dry and not yet played in.
Since I got cane reeds I only play on them anymore, even though I still like Légère reeds. Maybe the problem I had was not because of the reeds, but because I'm not an experienced player yet.
Thanks a lot for this video Dr. Wally ^^
P.S. I first got a ReedGeek for the Boston Sax Shop reeds and only used it for them (I think it really improves them a lot), but Mauro Di Gioia
, President/Founder of ReedGeek, Inc. has a video on UA-cam where he shows that ReedGeeks can also be used on Légère Reeds.
I'll check out the video, thanks for the tip Kiato!
I have been using Legere for several years playing in a Concert band. After trying multiple mouthpieces I decided on the Selmer Concept which I really love. I now can spend my time practicing the repertoir rather than trying to make the reed work.
I also often get praise on my tone quality, I know that does not entirely depend on the setup.
The only issue is the condensation that builds up on the reed, that makes me have to wipe of the reed more often.
But all in all, I will never change back to cane....
I had been using the American Cut since they came out, got used to the material, and now I really enjoy been able to work in the sound instead of adapting to the never ending changing reed temperament, the cane sometimes gives you more color" but if you compare I feel the Legere tends to be more even through the hole scale, leaving me to work in the sound I can produce, thank you for you great videos.
Used to buy 10 packs of LaVoz or Rico and find that a few never worked so the consistency of Legere is a plus but they do cost as much as five standard cane reeds so the longevity is really par for the cost. I've tried other synthetics - Fiberreed, Forestone, Fibracell but found that Legere are closest to cane sound.
I believe this is the exact same conversation people have about mouthpieces, in the sense that the main difference is in how the player perceives the sound and feel, never the listener.
Possibly so. I really care about the feel (as I'm sure you do). But in the back of the concert hall, double blind tests would be illuminating!
You are a great educator. I love listening to your channel. Keep it up you helped so many. Thanks...