wilkeliza
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Feb 1, 2013
- Messages
- 14,109
Schools aren't in the business off of making money. Some charge a fee to use school instruments but that just covers maintaining the instrument. More than likely, it was a balance issue. Band directors don't want a band of saxophones. They want lots of flutes and clarinets, fewer saxes, just a couple percussionists, and certain numbers for the brass family. Or, maybe the instrument was of poor quality. I always have parents who go out and buy a violin and tell me what a great deal they got. Then their child struggles since their parents bought a poorly constructed instrument.
I don't think it was the school itself but just the one director. The clarinet was purchased from a student who kept it well maintained and the high school director inspected it when she sold it to me. We even had it refurbished with new pads and bought a new mouth piece for it from a local musical shop that my mother used for maintenance of both of my brother's instruments. I didn't struggle with the clarinet at all and actually did pretty well. I get needing a balance but neither band I was in had issues with balance as you had to compete to get into the higher bands. Both schools had 2 sets of orchestras the "competition" orchestra and then everyone else. Actually my original school had 3 orchestras on top of the marching band. They held auditions every season because of that so it was up to you if you wanted to fight the 50 clarinets or the 10 trombone players.
