Choosing well, before you buy.
Practical tools and calculators for the questions a working musician asks before committing to a serious purchase. No upsell, no enrolment funnel — just the kind of structured thinking a good teacher or section principal would walk you through, made into something you can use yourself.
Built by people who’ve been on the buying side.
Most online music shopping is a list of products with prices. That’s fine for reeds. It’s not enough for a $5,000 trumpet, a child’s first violin, or an institutional procurement decision worth a quarter of a section’s annual budget.
These tools exist because we’ve spent years on the buying side — auditioning instruments, sizing students, writing quotes for school districts, sourcing flagship horns for working pros. The questions repeat. The right structure for asking them doesn’t change. We turned that structure into tools.
Use them. If they don’t answer your specific case, open a Concierge file and we’ll work it through with you in writing.
Six tools, working today.
Tap any card to use the tool. Each one solves a recurring purchase question we’ve answered hundreds of times.
Find my instrument
A guided path through brass, woodwind, string, percussion, and keyboard categories — matched to skill level, budget, and use-case.
- Choosing a first instrument for a student
- Stepping up from intermediate to professional
- Adding a doubling instrument or auxiliary horn
- Outfitting an ensemble or section
Instrument size guide
Sizing reference for children and adults — fractional sizes for strings, scaled options for guitar and harp, plus rental-vs-buy guidance.
- Sizing a child’s violin, viola, cello, or bass
- Choosing a 7/8 vs full-size for smaller adults
- Picking a 3/4 or parlour-size guitar for travel
- Knowing when to rent vs commit to ownership
Vendor directory
A–Z index of every direct-relationship maker we work with — instrument workshops, sheet-music publishers, and accessory manufacturers.
- Browsing by maker rather than by category
- Verifying we carry a specific brand or workshop
- Discovering smaller workshops behind the big names
- Building a comparison shortlist by vendor
Buying guides
Long-form editorial reference: urtext-edition comparisons, first-instrument buyer’s guides, the Suzuki method explained — written by working pros.
- Bärenreiter vs Henle on the same repertoire
- Choosing your first violin or trumpet at $1k–$5k
- Understanding what “urtext” actually means
- Pairing instruments to method-book expectations
Concierge file
When the tools don’t cover your case — flagship-tier purchases, vintage instruments, unusual specifications, international logistics — open a written file with us.
- Acquisitions above $10,000
- Vintage trumpets, oboes, and orchestral instruments
- Custom-bell or workshop-build orders
- International freight and customs handling
Institutional quote
Bulk and institutional purchase form for school districts, conservatoires, ensembles, and venues. Custom invoicing, sectional procurement, programme refits.
- School-district instrument refits
- Full-section orchestral procurement
- Conservatoire faculty equipment requests
- Venue and rental-house catalogue orders
Three steps, in order.
The tools are designed to compound. Used in sequence, they take you from rough idea to a vendor-direct purchase that holds up under inspection.
Define the question.
Use Find My Instrument or the Size Guide to convert a vague intent (“my daughter wants to start cello”) into a specific brief (“1/2 size, beginner tier, rental-eligible, budget under $1,200, ready by September”).
Read the relevant guide.
Browse the buying guides for editorial context. Different makers prioritise different things at the same price point, and the guides explain why — setup philosophy, regional traditions, what to inspect before signing the cheque.
Confirm via Concierge.
Once the brief is set, open a Concierge file. We confirm availability, line up freight and customs, draft the invoice, and answer the last 5%-of-cases questions in writing — not over chat.
The five most-asked buying guides.
Editorial deep-dives on the questions the tools surface. Read alongside the tools, not in place of them.
Bärenreiter vs Henle
Which urtext to buy on the same repertoire — editorial differences, source priorities, paper quality.
First trumpet
A buyer’s guide for the $500–$2,500 first-pro trumpet decision — bore, bell, lacquer, water keys.
First violin
Buying a first violin from $200 to $5,000 — what changes at each price tier, what to inspect.
The Suzuki method
A parents’ and teachers’ explainer — what the method actually is, what it requires, what to buy.
What urtext means
A short essay on what urtext actually is, why it matters, and which publishers earn the label.
Tools we’re still building.
Each of these is a question we keep answering by hand. Once a pattern stabilises, we turn it into a tool. Concierge handles the personalised version in the meantime.
Mouthpiece selector
A structured chooser for brass and woodwind mouthpieces. Cup depth, rim width, throat, backbore, facing, and tip-opening matched to embouchure and intended repertoire.
Programme refit calculator
For band and orchestra directors planning a multi-year refit: section-by-section budget projections, depreciation models, and a phased acquisition plan. Built for procurement cycles.
Featured comparisons
Side-by-side specification, pricing, and editorial-review comparison on common decisions: Bach vs Yamaha, Buffet R13 vs Tosca, Powell vs Haynes, Marigaux 901 vs 2001.
The right instrument doesn’t arrive by accident. It arrives by question.
Concierge for serious sourcing.
Tools cover the common cases. For a flagship-tier purchase, an unusual brief, or institutional procurement — open a Concierge file and we’ll work the specifics with you in writing.



