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Reviewed in the United States on June 5, 2022
This product is a great beginner tool for people interested in clarinets. The instrument is made of out resin so it is definitely not the highest quality but for the price this is great for something to dip your toes into the world of clarinets. The sound is fine and is not blaringly obvious that it is lower quality. The case will protect it against hard bumps and possibly even being thrown around so that means its perfect for children.
B. McCarthy
Reviewed in the United States on March 10, 2022
This is a great instrument, it sounds good and it is a good size. The weight feels good as well. The finish is great and the keys work well.
DANYEL'S CORNER
Reviewed in the United States on February 21, 2022
Love this! It sounds great and easy to piece together. This clarinet is made well and each piece came individually wrapped.
The Dirty Gringo
Reviewed in the United States on February 13, 2022
We are well pleased this Dleisis B Flat Clarinet 17 Nickel Keys Student Standard Clarinet Set and feel that it is the perfect kit for our son who just started playing in music class. The quality of the clarinet is far better than I had expected for the low price-point. Although he is new to playing it seems to sound quite good.The case that it comes with is also really nice as is the rest of the individual component pieces. A really great value for all that you get and we recommend it highly.
lisagat
Reviewed in the United States on February 12, 2022
I've been a "student" of the clarinet for many years - just play it as a hobby, never took any lessons. The clarinet I play with is an old hand-me-down plastic ("resonite") Bundy, so I thought I'd see what a newly manufactured clarinet sounded and played like. This clarinet came well packaged in a nylon-fabric zippered case (not sure if I'd call it a "hard" case). It included a pair of small-ish white cotton gloves, a stick of cork grease, a cleaning cloth with a weighted pull string, a small spade-bit screwdriver, a neck strap and all the the clarinet sections (mouthpiece with reed, ligature and cap; 2 barrels; upper joint/tube; lower joint/tube; and bell). Once all the cork was greased up the pieces fit together very tightly - it appears the the barrel, upper & lower joints and bell had been test assembled as the cork connecting those sections seemed to have been lightly greased at some point. The mouthpiece, however, looks like it had never been fitted to anything as the cork appeared new and pretty dry. It took a bit of grease and fitting and re-fitting to make it workable. I'm not sure of what thickness the reed is as there were no markings on it, but I was able to play it and get a good sound out of it. It was actually much easier to transition between the lower and upper registers of notes than my old Bundy. After playing a few tunes, I tried my old mouthpiece with it (an ebony mouthpiece I got as a gift from an old jazz musician who used to play in the 1920s-1940s) and found that with my mouthpiece I got a much better sound out of it, probably because that's the mouthpiece I'm used to. Overall, I'm very happy with this - just keep in mind that this is coming from someone who only plays as a hobby and doesn't really play or practice regularly.
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