"Ruined by the fact that I got water in my a-hole" 🤣 (feel frree to delete)
@ilanmetoudi11 ай бұрын
Thanks for the great advice!🙂
@mikesaxclar11 ай бұрын
I also would add, don't lay the instrument in your lap as it's going to direct the water into the tone holes.
@MrJamie1957Ай бұрын
Use a long Q-tip swab to "paint" a track of bore oil straight down the bottom of the inside of the bore. This creates a channel for the condensation and helps to keep it away from the tone holes. Rice paper works great to absorb moisture from the pads after swabbing.
@mozarte11 ай бұрын
Yamaha do have a cleaning paper for water blobs. I would use that or the BG drying pad for tone holes. But not the powder paper. Cause it will leave powder mixed with saliva residue in the long time. And causing sticky pad.
@CindyBartz11 ай бұрын
Another trick is at the beginning of your practice, after playing 5-10 mins, swab out 2 -3 times. Not sure why this works but there's never an issue throughout the rest of rehearsal, concert, etc.
@clarinetninja11 ай бұрын
Yes! The preemptive swab:) swabbing early and often is key
@caroleneary793511 ай бұрын
During the first part of your playing the instrument is much cooler than your warm breath, and that is what causes condensation (water drops) to cling to the inside of your instrument. As you play, the instrument warms up so less condensation forms.
@darrenparkes980527 күн бұрын
@@caroleneary7935thank you for advice,
@darrenparkes980527 күн бұрын
Thank you for bringing this up,
@darrenparkes980527 күн бұрын
@@caroleneary7935thank you for advice
@johnkotches832011 ай бұрын
You mentioned using Yamaha Powdered paper. I have found that the pad cleaning paper (with no powder) is effective for cleaning. For water in the toneholes I use Key Leaves' Spit Sponges. Quiet and much less instrusive. While I sometimes get water in the A key tonehole, I mainly get it in the Eb/Bb pad/tonehole between LH 1+2 and the lower Bb/F pad between RH 1+2. I do agree with someone who said that if it's becoming a more continuous problem that it might be time to oil the bore. I generally do twice a year in Colorado, Fall and Spring as the winters are quite dry.
@paulcaruso10427 ай бұрын
What about a drop of bore oil down the upper joint-angled away from the pads on the right?
@clarinetninja7 ай бұрын
I have heard of that working, but I have never done it myself. In cases like that, I err on the side of not talking about it. I don't have any direct experience with it. I am curious to know if you have tried it and what you think of it
@paulcaruso10427 ай бұрын
Just oiled the bore with a stuff it swap. Covered my pads with aluminum foil first. Solved my gurgles for now.
@clarinetninja7 ай бұрын
@@paulcaruso1042 great work!
@LBRandlePhD9 ай бұрын
At the end of a concert or practice session I have a puddle of water on the floor. Any suggestions to reduce this?
@clarinetninja9 ай бұрын
Yes. Swab much more frequently and earlier in your concert or practice session
@bonniem.pederson710511 ай бұрын
I knows there was a better need for Grandpa's cig papers👍👋😃
@Linkchu11 ай бұрын
I've heard someone say that this happens more with a clarinet that hasn't been oiled in a while as the water tends to get stuck more within the instrument. Not sure if that is true though
@clarinetninja11 ай бұрын
I have heard that too…I am not confident enough about it to state it as true:)
@mozarte11 ай бұрын
My technician says, it will leave a saliva trail caused by the nasty things in the saliva. Like the 'cheese' on the mouthpiece if not washed for a year. 😂
@whoitisnot11 ай бұрын
Oh for sure. I oil my clarinets every time gurgles suddenly become a more substantial issue and it always resets things. My students report the same. It clears those paths that the moisture starts to follow. Conveniently this is maybe a couple of times a year, which is about how often I might oil them in our climate anyway. Some people also get in there with a long q-tip and "paint" around the problem holes. I haven't tried that. Just general oiling is simpler and easier.
@michaelmcleary85665 ай бұрын
I now use waterproof clingfilm before taking a shower with it!
@RemunJ11 ай бұрын
And what about the temperature of the instrument in relation to air humidity? My advice would be to acclimatize the instrument as much as possible. Make sure you have a good suitcase if you go out into the cold.
@clarinetninja11 ай бұрын
My experience has mostly been that when the venue is cold there is a higher likelihood of water. I grew up in Alaska and spent a fair amount of time in the cold. Without a heat source, the inside of every case gets pretty cold with not much heat to insulate inside. The main issue with a cold instrument is allowing it to get to room temperature before playing it so that there is less of a chance of cracking. For sure hot instrument + cold venue = more condensation.
@RemunJ11 ай бұрын
@@clarinetninja Then building a heater in your clarinet case should be a brilliant idea don't you think? 😉 I recently heard that the Gulf Stream could come to a standstill or change direction due to climate change, which might cause the mild climate here in the Netherlands to change to a colder climate. Good for a possible Elfstedentocht but not for my clarinet. 😌 Thanks for all the informative videos. 👌😃🎶
@mmcreative705811 ай бұрын
Thanks for a good video on a largely ignored topic 👍
@TheTabwinner11 ай бұрын
Spit Sponge by Key Leaves
@SimonKATZOVICZ11 ай бұрын
That water do be bad
@clarinetninja11 ай бұрын
well said
@manmi585611 ай бұрын
What works muuch better than cigarette paper is plain old kitchen roll paper
@clarinetninja11 ай бұрын
I can imagine how effective that would be. My logistical concern would be how thick it is and the speed in which one needs to use it and how I would manage carrying it in my case