The Maui Xaphoon
The Maui Xaphoon is a very unique instrument, combining the convenience of portability with a deep, rich sound -- a cross between a clarinet and a saxophone. Now you can make wonderful music wherever you go - great sound and portability are no longer tradeoffs!
Below are several examples of what the Xaphoon can sound like in the hands of different musicians (and with different microphone setups). Click below to hear some sound bites offered in the .mp3 format.
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Below are 5 .mp3 audio samples of 4 Xaphoons, all recorded in the same studio setup, unaccompanied, for comparison purposes:
| Bamboo Sax in "C" | Order this instrument |
| Pocket Sax (in "C") | Order this instrument |
| Bamboo Sax in "Bb" | Order this instrument |
| Bamboo Sax in "D" | Order this instrument |
| Bamboo Sax in Low "G" |
(This is a custom order. Email for details.) |
More
notes on The XAPHOON from its creator, Brian Wittman:
"I have made over
15,000 such instruments in the past 20 years, all because of a single
instrument I made on the whim of a child. The young lad lived with his mother
in a tent in the woods, and heard me playing the sax (the expensive metal
variety). He approached respectfully and then boldly asked if perhaps I had a
little one he could play. Why not? I fiddled around and whittled a small
end-blown block flute out of bamboo. Its tone was wheezy and small, and
satisfied neither of us. I had a small grinding wheel I was using to shape some
wooden boat cleats, and in sudden inspiration I applied the flute to the wheel
and ground off the whole corner of the mouthpiece at an angle, re-shaping it to
take a sax reed. With a bit of string holding the reed, I blew a test note ...
it screamed!
The child was
delighted and couldn't wait to have it, so I passed it on, but immediately made
myself another, this time a bit longer, and I made the mouthpiece first so I
could hear the pitch as I located the finger holes. Somehow by chance I ended
up with a serviceable scale in E, and I couldn't put it down. I even played it
one-handed as I drove into town, not noticing the speedometer was reading 80
until I heard the sirens.
Finally I arrived
at the rehearsal studio where I was due, only to find a major hero, Mr. Airto
Morierra (the Brazilian percussionist) just happened to be there jamming with
my delighted band members. I jumped in on my new axe, and found that its strong
warm tone could be as full as a sax, and amplified very well in an electric
band setting. Airto was fascinated. so I offered this #2 instrument as a token
of my respect for his music.
So I made a third
and played it on gigs. People would come up and ask about it ... Where did you
get it? ... You made it? Can you make me one? ... What do you mean you don't
have time -- Here's my money! So I ended up in business. A name developed from
"bamboozaphone" to "bamboozafoon" to "bamboo
zafoon" to just "zafoon", also spelled "xaphoon". I
eventually moved closer to the bamboo forests, and even took out a patent in
several countries. And as I answered my mail and filled the orders, the years
went by. My children were born into a house built of bamboo saxophones, and
heard them from the womb onward.
The instrument I
have made commercially all these years is not much different than the first
experimental models. I did construct several larger instruments, some with
conical extensions (usually cow horn), but rather than complicate the design
with a number of pieces, I have elected to maintain the "one stick"
concept with the mouthpiece carved directly on the end of the instrument body.
Fortunately the bamboo naturally lends itself to this type of construction if
it is carefully chosen in the forest for the correct length and diameter.
After some
experimentation, I eventually found a hole placement and fingering system that
will allow two complete chromatic octaves, though the instrument remains
primarily diatonic. For example, it would be simple enough to play a C# note on
a C instrument, or sketch through a riff in that key while following the chord
changes, but it would not make much sense to transpose the entire tune to C#.
There would be just too many cross-fingerings and lip adjustments.
I have generally
restricted my output to C instruments, mostly to avoid confusing beginners with
too many choices. I will gladly make instruments of any key, but only if the
customer is still interested after having attained some skill on the C. The C
plays best in the keys of D,F, G, Gm, Dm, Am, etc.
Some of my
customers have surprised me by adopting radically different styles, from
Baroque to Peruvian to Irish to African. I greatly appreciate the occasional
tapes I receive from my customers. One can well imagine that the actual
construction of 15,000 of anything can become tedious, so it has become the
satisfaction of customers that drives me (as well as the opportunity to feed my
family). It is truly rewarding to receive orders from distant places and it
does get easier to make them now that I know how.
I can only wonder
though, if perhaps my punishment in the next world will be to hear them all
played at once."
Next: How they are Made