I was an employee there from 1980 to 1984. Played a Schilke 60. It became an old friend. I enjoyed this video as it brought back a lot of warm memories. Best wishes!
I guess you remember Steve Daniels, Ron Pinc, Kerry, Scott, Dave, etc. any stories to tell??? Were you there for the infamous elevator shaft incident or were you at the Winfield location at all?? I was not but have played Schilke's for a lifetime and know a lot of the old crew guys
Yes I remember them all. I don't know about any elevator incident except when we moved from WInfield back to the city, bringing the mouthpiece lathe up the elevator shaft was a bit harrowing. Watching those machine riggers work was interesting. @@chasefreak
I'm too old now, but I played a P5-4 for 25 years. It is an incredible horn in its intonation and full sound, and much fun to play. I remember that after 12 years it was in need of some minor tweaks on one of the valves so I contacted the company and sent it back to have it "overhauled." They cleaned it all up, sent it back to me after just a few days. It felt like a new horn, and they didn't charge me anything. What a great company and what a great instrument.
That’s Bill Chase in the center of the picture at 8:50. I saw his band Chase back in 1972. Man he had a powerful sound! I think he played a small bore Schilke with a beryllium bell
My trumpet teacher introduced me to a Schilke 14A4a mouthpiece and I have been using it for 35 years. I also had a 1970s Holton st302 MF. What a great combo. I need to get myself a new horn so I guess I will look for a Schilke.
I recently purchased a Shilke 144a trumpet mouthpiece. Wanted to learn more about this company. Thus far so hood. informative and high quality video. 👍🏾 ⚘️🎶✨️🎺
I am a trumpet player living in Japan. I have Schilke s33HD and HC2 and it is an EXCELLENT trumpet. I can say it is my life partner. It was a wonderful encounter. Thank you.
I purchased my Schilke B6 in the summer of 1975 at Long and McQuade in Vancouver. I was 16 years old, and had worked all summer saving for a new trumpet. It was love at first sight, and it is still my go to horn. It remains in pristine condition.
I have been playing for a living since 1985. I bought my first Schilke tuba mouthpiece in 1984 and used it for many years. I have been in my current orchestra for over thirty years now, and I use the SHII-CLE on my Adams F tuba; it is a fantastic mouthpiece. I will always use Schilke products. What a great company!
I adored Silky when I was in junior high school. It took me several decades to actually get my hands on a Silky trumpet, but I can say that it is truly an art form, a product of great technical skill and research.
I play B1 schilke, picked one in 2007. Since than had many horns and end up coming back to my B1. It's like my base line for excellence and great response. Not a professional but playing like one!
Great video. I was lucky enough to have a lesson with Schilke at the Wabash Ave studio and had him personally choose one of his mouthpieces for me. I was playing a Severenson at the time, but never could get the mouthpiece right, until Schilke. Working 5-6 nights a week, at the time, moving from one ax to another during a set, I could pick up the trumpet cold and rip into anything we had. A very special experience.
Interesting side note-the reason Mr. Schilke moved the shop to 529 S. Wabash initially was to be across the street from his fav' restaurant-The Cart. He used to send students there to p/u packages of saltine crackers to calm his ulcers. This way he could also be within walking distance of Roosevelt Un. as well as the CSO Music Complex. I do not know who made the original brass bells prior to 1967 but, between 1967 and 1982, all the yellow-brass bells were made by Yamaha. Mr. Schilke's original yellow-brass bell formula was a 60/40 combination (60% copper, 40% brass) The beryllium-copper bells were made by Kiefer Plating in Elkhart-those bells are super rare, ridiculously light, and sought after. These bells were 99.9 1/2% copper and 1/2% beryllium-this was used as a hardening alloy to get the bells super thin! Kiefer Plating closed in '77 and Schilke switched to having Anderson Plating make ALL the copper bells to this day. After '82, the yellow-brass bells were made by The Jenigna Bros. and continue to this day.
Something about Schilke. I was lucky I bought an S22 Gold plated instrument when I was at music college with a couple of customs on it. I had played many instruments but nothing for me beat the quality of Schilke. One of the biggest mistakes was I was offered one of Arturo Sandoval’s X3’s in the mid 90’s but didn’t have the spare cash at the time 😢. I am pretty sure the tuning slide on his was different. Someone told me it was made by spada in Switzerland but don’t know if that’s true was certainly more rounded than the standard B/X series trumpets.
I use Schilke mouthpieces, but haven't had a Schilke trumpet yet. Unfortunately it seems that most stores just want to carry Bach and Yamaha. Occasionally you'll find Getzen. Jupiter for students. The closest store to me doesn't even have Schilke mouthpieces.
I was an employee there from 1980 to 1984. Played a Schilke 60. It became an old friend. I enjoyed this video as it brought back a lot of warm memories. Best wishes!
I guess you remember Steve Daniels, Ron Pinc, Kerry, Scott, Dave, etc. any stories to tell??? Were you there for the infamous elevator shaft incident or were you at the Winfield location at all?? I was not but have played Schilke's for a lifetime and know a lot of the old crew guys
Yes I remember them all. I don't know about any elevator incident except when we moved from WInfield back to the city, bringing the mouthpiece lathe up the elevator shaft was a bit harrowing. Watching those machine riggers work was interesting. @@chasefreak
@@Bassposaunenspeiler1 that era at 529 S. Wabash was unique...you never knew who might be in the shop on any given day.
My friend Stephen Wilson worked there in the early 80s or so, had the greatest respect the products and company
I went to Schilke back in 1980, tried one of those trumpets and fell in love with how easy it was to play, then cried because of the price! 😂😂
I'm too old now, but I played a P5-4 for 25 years. It is an incredible horn in its intonation and full sound, and much fun to play. I remember that after 12 years it was in need of some minor tweaks on one of the valves so I contacted the company and sent it back to have it "overhauled." They cleaned it all up, sent it back to me after just a few days. It felt like a new horn, and they didn't charge me anything. What a great company and what a great instrument.
That’s Bill Chase in the center of the picture at 8:50. I saw his band Chase back in 1972. Man he had a powerful sound! I think he played a small bore Schilke with a beryllium bell
My trumpet teacher introduced me to a Schilke 14A4a mouthpiece and I have been using it for 35 years. I also had a 1970s Holton st302 MF. What a great combo. I need to get myself a new horn so I guess I will look for a Schilke.
Thank you for building my Schilke Handcraft HC2 Trumpet! It is an incredible horn! 🎺👍
I recently purchased a Shilke 144a trumpet mouthpiece. Wanted to learn more about this company. Thus far so hood. informative and high quality video. 👍🏾 ⚘️🎶✨️🎺
I am a trumpet player living in Japan.
I have Schilke s33HD and HC2 and it is an EXCELLENT trumpet.
I can say it is my life partner. It was a wonderful encounter.
Thank you.
I purchased my Schilke B6 in the summer of 1975 at Long and McQuade in Vancouver. I was 16 years old, and had worked all summer saving for a new trumpet. It was love at first sight, and it is still my go to horn. It remains in pristine condition.
Beat you to it! I purchased my B4L from Horace Hines at The Royal Conservatory in Toronto in 1972!!
I have been playing for a living since 1985. I bought my first Schilke tuba mouthpiece in 1984 and used it for many years. I have been in my current orchestra for over thirty years now, and I use the SHII-CLE on my Adams F tuba; it is a fantastic mouthpiece. I will always use Schilke products. What a great company!
Never owned a Schilke, always have wanted one though.
Schilke not Schiller Different countries and very different quality
I have been blowing your Eb/D for 40 years with joy and success to this day! Thank you!
I adored Silky when I was in junior high school.
It took me several decades to actually get my hands on a Silky trumpet, but I can say that it is truly an art form, a product of great technical skill and research.
long time X3 player here; that horn does it all - the only limitation is me...
Very educational, thank you folks. Brass/horn player now performing on highland pipes.
My two daughters and my son all play French horn -- with Schilke mouthpieces!
We LOVE our Schilkes! ❤🎉
I really like my '56 Schilke and E3L4. In high-school I would ditch school and hang out at 529 s. Wabash. I met Bud Herseth there several times.
lucky man
Bravo!
That's great history of Schilke!
I play B1 schilke, picked one in 2007. Since than had many horns and end up coming back to my B1. It's like my base line for excellence and great response. Not a professional but playing like one!
Great video. I was lucky enough to have a lesson with Schilke at the Wabash Ave studio and had him personally choose one of his mouthpieces for me. I was playing a Severenson at the time, but never could get the mouthpiece right, until Schilke. Working 5-6 nights a week, at the time, moving from one ax to another during a set, I could pick up the trumpet cold and rip into anything we had. A very special experience.
I hope one day to own a Schilke soprano cornet, i hear they play so fluent for the often difficult character of my so beloved Eb cornets haha
The best ...Schilkes
I got my Schilke in 1974. Still going strong.
What a video. Truly the mark of excellence.
My trumpet teacher recommended a B5 as a junior in HS. That was in 1973. It's the sound.
Great documentary, love it!
Never owned a schilke instrument, but I do have an old size 20 trumpet mouthpiece. Might give it a whirl sooner or later
Very interesting!
Nice video!
the greatest trumpet I ever owned
Interesting side note-the reason Mr. Schilke moved the shop to 529 S. Wabash initially was to be across the street from his fav' restaurant-The Cart. He used to send students there to p/u packages of saltine crackers to calm his ulcers. This way he could also be within walking distance of Roosevelt Un. as well as the CSO Music Complex. I do not know who made the original brass bells prior to 1967 but, between 1967 and 1982, all the yellow-brass bells were made by Yamaha. Mr. Schilke's original yellow-brass bell formula was a 60/40 combination (60% copper, 40% brass)
The beryllium-copper bells were made by Kiefer Plating in Elkhart-those bells are super rare, ridiculously light, and sought after. These bells were 99.9 1/2% copper and 1/2% beryllium-this was used as a hardening alloy to get the bells super thin! Kiefer Plating closed in '77 and Schilke switched to having Anderson Plating make ALL the copper bells to this day. After '82, the yellow-brass bells were made by The Jenigna Bros. and continue to this day.
Well, Dana, someone you know has a horn you made. Me. After 16 years with it, it still just sings.
I love Schilke=7⭐
1977 X-3 incredible horn!
Something about Schilke. I was lucky I bought an S22 Gold plated instrument when I was at music college with a couple of customs on it. I had played many instruments but nothing for me beat the quality of Schilke. One of the biggest mistakes was I was offered one of Arturo Sandoval’s X3’s in the mid 90’s but didn’t have the spare cash at the time 😢. I am pretty sure the tuning slide on his was different. Someone told me it was made by spada in Switzerland but don’t know if that’s true was certainly more rounded than the standard B/X series trumpets.
I am french but play XA1 cornet, B6 , C5, and P7-4 in classical music : 👍❤
Sax guy but still impressed.
What is the first song called?
Festive Overture - Shostakovich
It's one of my favorite pieces of all time
@@MorikawaMelodies thank you
I play an S22!
Only valid horns are the p54 p74 and the shepherds crook cornets
haha
I use Schilke mouthpieces, but haven't had a Schilke trumpet yet. Unfortunately it seems that most stores just want to carry Bach and Yamaha. Occasionally you'll find Getzen. Jupiter for students. The closest store to me doesn't even have Schilke mouthpieces.
Nice work!