Morgan Baritone Saxophone Mouthpiece Prototype

Hacked Preview of our New Baritone Saxophone Mouthpiece Prototype

Today is April 6th and it is the Birthday of Gerry Mulligan.  Today is a great day to give an unofficial glimpse of our new mouthpiece for baritone saxophone.  This is just a preview of the prototype from phone pictures of progress from our craftsmen.  Official information and photos will be out when production starts later this Spring.

This is Gerry Mulligan:

Gerry famously played much of his career on a mouthpiece made by M.C. Gregory. 

This is an original M.C. Gregory baritone saxophone mouthpiece mold which was recently acquired by the Morgan Mouthpiece Company:

Using our pure rubber formula, which is probably similar to what M.C. Gregory used, here is the casting from the mold:

After many hours of curing and letting Erik Greiffenhagen work his magic, here's the nearly finished prototype:

And here's a crude hacked video of Erik test playing the unfinished prototype:

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ioLeuSRHgRw

Morgan Mouthpiece Company will start production on this model this Spring.  We will use this mold with our pure rubber formula.  These will be handcrafted to perfection by some of the most experienced mouthpiece craftsmen in the world.  If you are a fan of M.C. Gregory baritone saxophone mouthpieces, this will certainly be one to try.  More information and photos to come in later this Spring.

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22 comments

Please,please,please……. Let me know when this piece will be available !!!!

Justin

I’ll be waiting with baited breath to blow one of these pieces. Erik sounded great despite the potato quality of the video.

ModernBariSax.com

I play a Conn baritone from the mid 40’s. Have yet to find a piece that i really like. Would love to try one. Will you notify me when they are available? I live in Cleveland and would be happy to drive down.

john orsini

Any baffle? Possible to try one?

Mark Thompson

Have you considered bringing back the original Morgan baritone mouthpieces as well? They were tremendous but are almost impossible to source on the used market now.

Benn Sutcliffe

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