Description
Adler’s 1357/125 ‘Jubilee’ model is a wonderful bassoon with stable intonation and beautiful tone. It is ideal for students but also amateurs alike. It is a variation on the popular 1357 model.
Main product description
The 1357/125 ‘Jubilee’ model bassoon is a variation on Adler’s entry level 1357 model. It is ideal for students and amateurs alike and has a stable intonation and beautiful tone.
All of Adler’s bassoons are made from mountain special mountain maple wood, supplied from the Highland of Bosnia in specially selected quality. All of it is seasoned naturally for over 10 years in Adler’s Markneukirchen facilities before being accepted for production.
The 1357/125 model features a 24-key set up, a high D-key, 5 rollers from F to Ab and to F# for the right-hand little finger, and C# to Eb for the left-hand little finger, an additional Ab key for the right thumb and trill keys for F# to G#, C# to D# and E to F#. All the key work is silver-plated.
Howarth supplies this Adler bassoon in a Kölbl gig bag, reed case, sling, silk pull-throughs, cork grease, one crook in either length 1 or 2 and set up for a balance hanger to be fitted.
Specification
- 24 keys
- 5 rollers
- High D-key
- Ab key for right thumb
- No front Bb key
- F#/G#, C#/D#, E/F# trill keys
- Silver-plated key work
- Seasoned Bosnian Maple wood
- 1 Adler crook in either length 1 or 2
- Optional balance hanger
About maker
The Adlers were a famous family of musical craftsmen from the 17th Century from Markneukirchen. Franz Oscar Adler was a third-generation woodwind instrument maker. He and his brother Robert Oswald learned woodwind instrument making from their father, Johann Gottlob and his father before him. Robert started his own company in 1891, producing woodwind instruments under the label ROA. His son Johann founded his own workshop in Markneukirchen, earning an excellent reputation in the world of recorders. Oscar founded Oscar Adler & Co. in 1885, and soon grew his business such that by the turn of the century, it was considered the largest woodwind manufacturer in Germany specialising in clarinets and flutes. In 1901 the firm produced 21 bassoons and one contrabassoon (and was recognised to have built the first saxophone in the German-speaking region). The firm currently concentrates on oboes and bassoons. The two East German factories of Adler and Mönnig merged their businesses after the fall of the Berlin Wall in 1989 with the two Markneukirchen brands continuing in tandem.
Warranty
This instrument comes with a 1 Year Warranty from Howarth of London, and a free ‘Guarantee Checkover’ from our Repair Workshop before the warranty expires.