Collection:
Marcinkiewicz Trombone/Euphonium/Baritone Mouthpieces
About Shank Size/Selection
The shank is the part of the mouthpiece that fits into the instrument. Choosing the correct shank size is important because a mouthpiece must match the receiver of your instrument to fit and play properly.
A mouthpiece made for trombone, euphonium, or baritone will physically fit any instrument that uses that same shank size.
If you have any questions please contact us!
Trombone Mouthpieces
Small Shank
- Most student tenor trombones
- Most jazz and commercial tenor trombones
- Common examples: Bach TB200, Yamaha YSL-354, King 606
Large Shank
- Most large-bore orchestral tenor trombones
- Most bass trombones, but specific bass trombone mouthpieces have a much larger cup and rim
- Common examples: Bach 42B, Conn 88H, Edwards bass trombones
Euphonium/Baritone Mouthpieces
Large Shank
- Most modern compensating euphoniums
- Common examples: Yamaha YEP-641, YEP-642, YEP-842, King 2280, Conn191, Jupiter 570
Small Shank
- Most baritones
- Some student euphoniums
- Common examples: Yamaha YEP-201, YEP-321, YBH-621, YBH-321, King 623, 625, 628, Jupiter 470, 474, 468, 464.
- Most marching baritones and marching euphoniums
ProLine Concert Hall mouthpieces have a unique exterior design that offers optimal nodal enhancement by placing integral vibration dampers in specific, calculated areas. The net result is a mouthpiece that gives an extremely stable center of pitch, allows unprecedented dynamic levels without distortion and provides a rich, dark symphonic sound without the additional mass of a conventional heavy wall mouthpiece.
80 products