The Silverstein ligature
Monday, November 25, 2013 at 06:44PM
[Daniel Stover]

Disclosure.

Since the original post, I have been playing Silverstein ligatures exclusively and became an endorsing artist.  I decided to leave my original post as is so visitors could see my honest original opinions and not think I was only singing its praises because I was an endorser.

 

Not long ago, on Facebook, you couldn't go five minutes without seeing a post from Silverstein Works promoting their Silverstein ligature.  I admit, their posts seemed to be alot of marketing hype. But then I saw they had a "Trial for Pros" program.  Register and they'd send you a ligature to try  for two weeks.  I decided, "what the heck, I'll give a try just to see what it's all about."

 Steve Neff has a very detailed review on his blog including pictures.  I refer you to his post because he is much better at writing reviews than I, and my experience with the Silverstein parallels his

 As a clarinetist, I played a string ligature made by Sounds of Woodwinds in the past and liked it pretty well.  I had two of them that ended up breaking in one form or another.  These ligatures were platic screw mounts with a thin nylon string.  Perhaps due to their age, or previous use, the plastic was a bit brittle and on one, the threads stripped, and the other, the screw mount flat out shattered.

The Silverstein has all metal hardware, so not much fear of of the issues I had  with the vintage SOW ligatures.

 From one source, I learned that the string is some kind of Kevlar reinforced woven construction.  Considerably thicker than the old SoW ligature string and more rigid.

The first few times I tried to use the Silverstein, I wasn't terribly impressed.  It was a decent ligature.  It did what a ligature was supposed to do; hold the reed to the mouthpiece.  The one I received was, I thought, a little small for my mouthpiece, and I was having difficulty getting it low enough on the reed so as to not close off the tip opening. I gave up trying to get better results with it for a while.  Then a few weeks later, I forgot my Vandoren Optimum on my stand.  Luckily, I had the Silverstein in my case.  I went ahead and gave it another chance.  Perhaps it had gotten broken in, but it seemed to fit better and my tone was noticably freer and more vibrant/responsive. 

 

I will admit that, initially, I was  not sure that it was such an improvement that I would say, "shut up and take my money."

I have since changed that viewpoint.

As I have been becoming more familiar with the ligature, I continue to find new qualities I like, that I've never seen in other ligatures.  For instance; just the other night,  in my community  band rehearsal, I could feel the reed's vibrations on my lip better than ever before.  It's hard to explain. It was some kind of tactile feedback that was comforting.  Even though the band as a whole is sometmes too loud to really hear myself, I could tell I was in tune and that my sound was blending in by the way the reed felt.  Soft low note attacks were less work, and the notes in the palm key range were fuller and easier to keep in tune.

 

Also, the folks at Silverstein Works are excellent. There was a SNAFU in the shipping of my ligature and it seemed to be lost in the  postal system. Most businesses would have just said "give it some time and see if it shows up." and expect the matter to eventually be resolved by the carrier or plain forgotten about  But these folks were eager to see that I received my ligature and rushed a replacement.  I gather that this is a relatively small company very intent on providing the best customer service possible.  communication was always prompt and direct.  Even since getting the ligature and trying it out, the director has been in regular contact checking up on how it has been working for me and seeing if there was anything I needed changed/improved upon

 I can't tell from a quick look at their website if their trial program is still active.  But I certainly wouldn't hesitate in suggesting you try it out if it is.

Update on Wednesday, May 20, 2015 at 05:12PM by Registered Commenter[Daniel Stover]

After using the original model Silverstein ligature for about a year and a half.  I decided to splurge and get their new Cryo4 model.  As with my first ligature, there was a SNAFU in delivery.  My package sat in the wrong post office branch for three weeks before it got back into the system and delivered.  I was anxious to get this baby broken in so it could really sing.  Turned out, it was already awesome right from the get-go!

 

The Cryo4 looks basically the same as the original ligature, except for having two pairs of fine tuner bars, rather than just two bars, and being made of a different metal alloy which is gold in colour, looking similar to an old bare brass saxophone that has had some patina due to age. To be completely honest, I never have been able to really notice much chage in the response by the placement of the bars.  I notice more change from varying the tightness of the ligature. The cryo4 has all the same basic characteristics of the original Silverstein, only amplified somewhat. I feel the sound is more "compact" or "focused" in no way muffled.  I use quotation marks for such desciptions because of the subjective nature of such terms.  The feeling of the reed in playing is similar but I feel a bit more vibrant.  The same way low note response was improved with the original model over my Vandoren Optimum, the low notes seem to be improved even more. 

Another home run with this ligature!

The one warning is that the cost of the Cryo4 is significantly more than the original model ligatures.  When I recommend the ligature to people, I suggest getting on the Trial for Pros program and trying out the original Silverstein first, so they can see if it tickles their fancy.  If so, then make the investment in the cryo4.

Update on Monday, June 27, 2016 at 09:07PM by Registered Commenter[Daniel Stover]

Siverstein Prelude ligature

 


The newest member of the Silveratein lineup is the Prelude model.  This could, I suppose, be called their "budget" model.  Don't let the fact that it is half the price of the Classic model fool you.  This ligature is every bit as good as the Classic.  I dare say I like it better. I gave my original classic model to one of my junior high students a while back, so I'm going from memory.  I haven't gotten around to comparing the two directly. 

 

As with past Silverastein ligatures, It was a bit snug at first.  But once it got broken in, it slid right down to where I prefer my ligature to sit and really sang beautifully.  All the typical qualities of a Silveratein.  super easy low notes, vibrant tone throughout the range.  nice crisp articulation in both high and low extremes.  Altissimo is super easy compared to some other ligatures.   This model brings all the benefits of Silveratein ligatures into a pricepoint that is accessable to so many, considering it's about the same as a Vandoren Optimum or a BG.  And Ithink it's a much better ligature than the Optimum.

 

Article originally appeared on onehandsax (http://www.onehandsax.com/).
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