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The Imperfect Saxophone

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  • The Saxophone
    • Woodblock Print of Adolphe Sax, ca. 1867
    • Couesnon & Cie Alto Saxophone, 1900
    • Carl Fischer Contrabass Saxophone, ca. 1909-1930
    • Alto and Tenor Saxophone Mouthpieces, ca. 1920s
    • Frank Holton Tenor Saxophone, ca. 1914-1915
    • J.W. York & Sons Soprano Saxophone, 1923
    • J.W. York Saxophone Fingering Chart, 1922
    • C.G. Conn Bass Saxophone, ca. 1923
    • Henri Selmer “Paris Modele 22” Alto Saxophone, 1923
    • Tom Brown Professional Model Tenor Saxophone, ca. 1926
    • Tom Brown Tenor Saxophone Reed Case, undated
    • C.G. Conn F-Mezzo Soprano Saxophone, ca. 1927-1928
  • Tom Brown
    • Photograph of Tom Brown, April 11, 1917
    • Photograph of Tom Brown, ca. 1910
    • Couesnon & Cie Alto Saxophone, 1900
    • Columbia Recording of American Patrol, Performed by the Brown Brothers, 1911
    • “Saxarella,” composed by Rudy Wiedoeft, 1923
    • Emerson Phonograph Company recording of “12th Street Rag,” performed by the Six Brown Brothers, ca. 1914.
    • It Happens in the Best Regulated Families Comic Strip, December 20, 1918
    • New Victor Records Catalog, September 1916 and Will Rossiter Publisher Royalty Contract, May 1915
    • The Saxophone: Its History and Its Uses Advertising Brochure, 1920
    • Photograph of Paul Whiteman outside the Tom Brown Music Company, Chicago, 1922
    • Tom Brown Topics, September 1926
    • Tom Brown Music Store Program Book, ca. 1920 and Tom Brown Professional Band Instruments Advertisement, ca. 1930
    • Tom Brown Professional Model Tenor Saxophone, ca. 1926
    • Tom Brown Tenor Saxophone Reed Case, undated
  • The Sousa Band
    • “You Ain’t Heard Nothing Yet,” arranged by R.A. Halle, 1919
    • Foundation to Saxophone Playing: An Elementary Method, by Ben Vereecken, 1917
    • Frederick K. Monroe Photograph, ca. 1924
    • Sousa Band Saxophone Section Photograph, ca. 1926
    • C.G. Conn Bass Saxophone, ca. 1923

You’ve reached the end of “Tom Brown” section of this virtual tour.

We hope you enjoyed learning about Tom Brown and the early performance history of the Saxophone. Follow another path below, or click through to the conclusion of The Imperfect Saxophone exhibit.

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