Reeds

The reed in the photographs below was given by Marcel Tabuteau to his Curtis student, Ted Heger in 1951. The second photo shows a closeup of the scrape.

During the mid-1950s and early 60s, Frank Stalzer purchased gouged/shaped cane, reeds and oboes from Tabuteau that he freely shared with his students. The two Tabuteau reeds below were given to his pupil, Bennie Cottone, who kindly photographed them for this website.

Both reeds lack ‘rails’ and have only the slightest indication of a ‘heart.’

Short Reed Long Reed
Length 68.0 mm 75.0 mm
Staple 45.5 mm 46.25 mm
Start of scrape above thread 20.0 mm 21.5 mm
Width of tip 7.0 mm 7.0 mm

The two Tabuteau reeds pictured below from David Weber were made at the Drake Hotel in 1959 for Sam Robinson when Tabuteau returned to the States for a visit.

Longer Reed Shorter Reed
Length 74 mm 72 mm
Staple 45.5 mm 47 mm
Start of scrape above thread 24 mm 22 mm
Width of tip 7.0 mm 7.25 mm
Length above the binding 27 mm 24.5 mm

Below are five Tabuteau reeds, and one by David Weber scraped on by Tabuteau (white thread), from 1963. Courtesy of David Weber. Photos by Nancy Lehrer.

 Reed 1Reed 2Reed 3Reed 4Reed 5Reed 6
Total length70 mm70 mm70.5 mm70 mm69 mm67.5 mm
Staple46 mm46 mm47.5 mm47.5 mm46.6 mm46 mm
Width at tip6.5 mm7.0 mm6.5 mm7.0 mm7.0 mm6.5 mm

The four reeds pictured below were given by Tabuteau to Adrian Gnam in Nice during July of 1965. Courtesy of Adrian Gnam.

Reed 1 Reed 2 Reed 3 Reed 4
Staple 46.5 mm 47 mm 46.5 mm 47 mm
Shaper width at tip of reed 7.5 mm 7.5 mm 7.5 mm 7.5 mm
Total length 72.5 mm 72.5 mm 71.0 mm 72.5 mm
Tip started (from binding) 23.5 mm 22.0 mm 23.0 mm 24.0 mm

The four reeds shown below were sent by Marcel Tabuteau to Laila Storch in 1965 when she lived in Puerto Rico. Laila gave them to her student, Dr. Charles Larsson, who kindly sent in the following photographs.

 Reed 1Reed 2Reed 3Reed 4
Length above the binding24 mm23 mm23.5 mm24.5 mm
Start of the scrape above the binding21 mm20 mm21 mm21 mm
Tip width7.25 mm7 mm6.75 mm7.25 mm
Staple length46 mm46 mm46.5 mm47 mm
Total length70 mm69 mm70 mm72 mm

Charles “Chip” Hamann, principal oboe of Canada’s National Arts Centre Orchestra contributed the following images of a Tabuteau reed from 1965 given to him by his predecessor, Tabuteau student Rowland Floyd.

Overall length: 71mm
Tie length: 46.5 mm (tube might be 46.5 or 47)
Width at top: 7.5mm
Fish skin on the reed

Overall length 71 mm
Tie length 46.5 mm (tube might be 46.5 or 47)
Width at top 7.5 mm
Fish skin on the reed

Brent Hages reports that John de Lancie gave this Tabuteau reed to Fred Capps, who gave it to Michael Finkelman, who then gave it to the present owner, Brent Hages.

Total length69.0 mm
Length of Staple46.0 mm (cut down from 47.0 mm)
Location of the start of the scrape above the binding21.0 mm
Tip width7.0 mm
Length of tip1.50 mm
Length of hump 2.0 mm

Additional information:

  1. No spine
  2. Rails just barely present
  3. Scrape extends back to 5.00 mm above the binding
  4. The long area in back of the very short hump contains a 9.0 mm section at the bottom of the scrape which is a bit deeper than the area above it.

(High magnification photos by Nancy Lehrer)

The four reeds pictured here were obtained from Tabuteau’s widow following his death in 1965. They comprise part of David Ledet’s extensive collection of music and memorabilia (including Tabuteau’s reeds and tools) housed in the music department of the University of Georgia in Athens, Georgia. Photo by David Ledet. Oboe Reed Styles. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1981.

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Frank Stalzer’s Reeds in High Resolution

Photographed by Nancy Lehrer

Short Reed

Long Reed

David Weber’s Reeds in High Resolution

Photographed by Nancy Lehrer

Longer Reed

Shorter Reed

David Weber’s Reeds in High Resolution

Photographed by Nancy Lehrer

Reed #1

Reed #2
The blades are caught one within the other!

Reed #3

Reed #4

Reed #5

Reed #6

Laila Storch’s Tabuteau Reeds in High Resolution

Photographed by Nancy Lehrer

Reed #1

Reed #2

Reed #3

Reed #4

What's New!

An audio interview with Joan Browne (Champie), a private Tabuteau student in the early 1950s.

A photograph of the music stand that was in Tabuteau’s private studio in Philadelphia.

An autographed photo of Marcel Tabuteau inscribed to Vladimir Sokoloff.

An autographed photo of Marcel Tabuteau inscribed to Joan Browne Champie.

With the passing of Wilbur Isaac Hilles in August 2023 and now Martha Scherer-Alfee in February 2024, no oboe students of Marcel Tabuteau at the Curtis Institute are still living.

A letter sent to the Curtis Institute by Laila Storch’s mother about Tabuteau not teaching at Curtis—and the reply.