Have a YSL354 trombone here. In great shape, no longer in marching band so this straight horn has to go. It's a small bore, so it's easy to play obnoxiously loud, or to play in general in case of a beginner. It's a great horn, had it for 7 years, no dents can be found on the slide, however some scratches/dings are on the tuning slide from being laid to rest on concrete. I have some electrical tape on there to prevent further damage, but will pull it off for you to look at. A little more electrical tape can be found on the water valve, where the cork has gone bad. $3 bucks and a little Elmer's glue will prevent your saliva from saturating the french horn player's new haircut in the stand below you. Guess that's why I never bothered to fix it. A premium non-stuck tuning slide also helps with those Fb's your band director complained about.
Even if you can't hit that high G, you'll be the coolest guy around when your bandmates see the sweet case this puppy gets to sleep in. Not even a pin-sized puncture in this plastic, but it IS plastered with confidence boosting stickers.
Comes with a 22c mouthpiece for those long sessions in the stratosphere. I'll chuck in a Bach 6.5AL mouthpiece as well, only thing is it's not a Bach mouthpiece, but certainly plays/feels like a 6.5AL, which is the barometer which other mouthpieces are measured.
No checks/money orders/wire transfers/debit/credit cards/livestock or other bizarre forms of payment, and certainly no shipping. (if you rode the short bus, I'm saying CASH ONLY)
email or text
- both equally fast
YSL354 YSL-354 bone tr0mb0ne.
Location: Cypress