• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Website of Steve Neff

  • BLOG
  • SHOP
  • MY ACCOUNT
  • RAVES
  • CONTACT

Search Neffmusic

You are here: Home / Reviews / Mouthpiece Reviews / Tenor Mouthpiece Reviews / Tenor High Baffle Reviews / Pete Thomas PPT Tenor Saxophone Mouthpiece 7* Review

Pete Thomas PPT Tenor Saxophone Mouthpiece 7* Review

June 1, 2010 by Steve 20 Comments

This is a great mouthpiece from Pete Thomas over in the UK.  I emailed him a few months ago because I was interested in trying one of his tenor mouthpieces.   He was kind enough to send me this one.  I’m not sure what it is made of  but it looks pretty cool.  It’s looks remind me of some of those white rocks you find on the beach sometimes.

I will say up front that this is a mouthpiece that really surprised me.  As soon as I opened the package and looked at it I thought “I’m really not going to like this mouthpiece”.  It has a pretty high and long baffle in it. Usually when I play a tenor mouthpiece with that high a baffle it is incredibly loud, bright and obnoxious.  Sometimes,  I also find them hard to keep in tune.  I kept this mouthpiece sitting on my desk for about a week and just kept looking at it.  I felt a bit scared to try it……………..

PPT Handmade Mouthpiece

This morning I drank a few cups of Java and thought “OK, it’s time to try it out.”  I was very surprised.  The first thing I noticed was that the tone wasn’t near as bright  as I thought it would be.  It was thick and powerful.  Down low the notes seemed centered and round like I like them.  I actually found it well balanced and quite beautiful sounding.  It sounded great just laying back and playing some bebop lines on it.  If I put some more air through it I could quickly get a funk/rock sound out of it.

The second thing that I noticed, was that I felt totally at ease with this mouthpiece.  Many times,  I have to play a mouthpiece for a few hours or sometimes a few days just to get use to it.  This PPT mouthpiece, I only played for about 15 minutes and I felt very comfortable on it.  The clips I posted below were after 15 minutes of playing and they came out pretty good I thought.

The first one is with my typical recording setup so you can hear how it sounds compared to my other mouthpiece trials.  The second clip was recorded in my garage.  I love playing brighter more powerful tenor mouthpieces in my garage because it gives the sound a natural reverb that I like.  That’s my favorite place to practice.

Thanks to Pete Thomas for letting me try this mouthpiece. It was a real joy to play.  If you want to find out more about them or even order one you can visit  www.petethomas.co.uk

Normal Recording

https://www.neffmusic.com/images/mp3/PPT.mp3

Recorded in Garage with Natural Reverb

https://www.neffmusic.com/images/mp3/PPT%20Garage.mp3

Filed Under: Tenor High Baffle Reviews, Tenor Mouthpiece Reviews Tagged With: high baffle, Pete Thomas, PPT tenor mouthpiece, tenor saxophone

Steve

About Steve

Steve Neff has been playing and teaching saxophone and jazz improvisation around the New England area for over 30 years. He is the author of many best selling jazz improvisation methods as well as founding the popular jazz video lesson site Neffmusic.com.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. AvatarDarren Smith says

    June 1, 2010 at 3:56 pm

    Love the sound you’re getting from this Steve… this might just swing it for me to get one of these… a quick question though.. how reed-friendly is this piece?

    Reply
    • stevesteve says

      June 1, 2010 at 9:23 pm

      Well, I opened a Java 2 1/2 and put it on and it played perfect. I didn’t try another one though. It seemed pretty reed friendly to me.

      Reply
  2. AvatarMike says

    June 1, 2010 at 9:27 pm

    This sounds like a real keeper. I might just have to buy one. All proceeds go to charity as well!

    Reply
    • stevesteve says

      June 1, 2010 at 9:56 pm

      I already emailed Pete and he said I could buy this from him so I’m happy. I don’t really have a go to piece but I’m glad to have this in my options. I’d like to see how it plays after playing it for a few weeks and getting used to it.

      Reply
  3. AvatarMarius says

    June 6, 2010 at 2:41 pm

    Hi Steve
    1. I have few questions . Does it realy change the sound if the sax is unlacquerd?
    2. What Neck do you recommand for Tenor sax? What brand?
    3.What reed do you recommand for Jazz ?
    Thanks for your help Marius

    Reply
    • stevesteve says

      June 7, 2010 at 12:18 pm

      Whether a sax is laquered or not makes no difference to me. The test is how it plays. I will never ever buy a sax without playing it first. I don’t have any feeling about necks. I play the one that came with my SBA and the one that is with my Virtuoso. You can play any reed for jazz there isn’t one that’s better than the others. It has to do with your preference. I like the Vandoren Java reeds personally.

      Reply
  4. AvatarMarius says

    June 8, 2010 at 4:51 am

    What is realy important to look when i buy a used sax.?

    Reply
    • stevesteve says

      June 8, 2010 at 9:27 am

      The only thing I look for is how it sounds and feels when I play it.

      Reply
  5. AvatarMarius says

    June 9, 2010 at 12:35 am

    Thanks o lot Marius

    Reply
  6. AvatarPeter says

    June 24, 2010 at 11:12 am

    Steve,

    It’s been a few weeks now, Do you still feel the same way about the PPT mthpc?

    thanks,
    Pete

    Reply
    • stevesteve says

      June 24, 2010 at 2:21 pm

      Well, I played the other day in a lesson and it seemed to bright for my tastes. That always happens to me. It sounds great in a big room or recorded but in a dry practice room it sounds too bright to me. I guess that’s just life.

      Reply
  7. Avatarrzzzzz says

    August 1, 2010 at 5:47 pm

    Steve,

    I had a real hard time with this mouthpiece. Squealing incessantly. Admittedly, I’m just starting to play, but there was nothing insurmountable about working up from a Meyer G5 to a Ponzol ML. But this thing was a challenge. And then I happened onto an old Rico 2, and everything just fell under control. Weird. Beautiful sound when played gently.

    Reply
    • stevesteve says

      August 1, 2010 at 7:10 pm

      That’s strange. Obviously, I can’t speak for every mouthpiece. If you have a hard time with a piece you should contact the maker and have it checked over and refaced if necessary. Most craftsman will do this if you approach them about it.

      Reply
  8. AvatarAlan says

    November 9, 2010 at 1:15 pm

    I loved mine at first but like you Steve after awhile it just seemed too bright/shrill/loud -in the highs especially. It seems like a piece that needs to be held back on or she’ll get unruly. Since I bought that ESP 7* from you little else gets played -she can do it all and that includes nice full sounding highs.

    Reply
    • stevesteve says

      November 9, 2010 at 1:19 pm

      Yes, it’s funny……with bright pieces I love them in a big hall or room that echoes but then when I play them in a dead room I find them to bright for my tastes.

      Reply
  9. AvatarPeyton says

    August 7, 2011 at 2:20 pm

    Hi Steve
    You sound great as always on this piece! I have been looking into getting a brighter tenor mouthpiece to play Funk/ R&B and my first choice of material would be metal. Does this piece have a similar feel as a metal piece or is it closer to hard rubber?
    Thanks a lot
    Peyton

    Reply
    • stevesteve says

      August 7, 2011 at 3:56 pm

      I would say it feels more like hard rubber to me. The width and feel in the mouth is like hard rubber.

      Reply
  10. AvatarPaul H. says

    January 3, 2012 at 3:41 pm

    Man,

    Love the sound. My only concern is if the tip opening of the 7* is too much for me since I am not really a power one. I am using Otto link 6* now.
    Can some one please advise.

    Thank you

    Reply
    • stevesteve says

      January 6, 2012 at 11:50 am

      I don’t think it would be that big of a difference. Your 6* has a lower baffle than the PPT do I think it will feel closer than you think.

      Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Pete Thomas PPT Metal Tenor Mouthpiece says:
    January 16, 2014 at 11:58 am

    […] mouthpiece by Pete Thomas.  The  PPT metal mouthpieces have similar internal dimensions to the Onyxite PPT that I reviewed a few years ago.  The facings are based on Ed Pillinger’s original facings, […]

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Darren Smith Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Steve Neff

Cart


NEFFMUSIC PRINTED BOOKS

Testimonials

Steve,  Just want to say thanks for all you are doing for all of us. I’ve learned more from you than anyone else in my 40 years of playing.

If you can give some tips on One Note Samba, Ceora, and Wave… that would be cool.  I really like learning how you apply your concepts to actual songs!

Have a great year,

Kevin Ledbetter

I've learned more from you than anyone else in my 40 years of playing.
Hey Steve, I’m a 22-year-old from Australia. I thought it would be worth saying. You’re an absolute legend. I can’t thank you enough. You have helped me rekindle my love for the saxophone and music as a whole. All the best for the future, your work doesn’t go unnoticed. PS. I am loving your devastating minor lines pdf.
Sapph
Your major diatonic patterns book is great. I”m studying the first twenty patterns (first twenty pages) each day with different articulation each day and slowly increasing the tempo each week or so.  There is a noticeable improvement in finger coordination across all keys and its amazing how much more secure I feel on the difficult keys when attempting to play pieces with 5+ flats/sharps. I’m able to sort out the fingerings for these pieces now much more quickly than before, often in one or two … Read more
Geoff
I have NEVER seen material like yours.  Amazing!!
Jerry
I’ve been downloading your lessons for 4 months now (20 lesson) and I have noticed tremendous growth in my playing thus far! I’m so happy that I stumbled upon your site!
Bob
Your lessons on playing the blues is so clear . I have been through many books on blues playing and not one of them explains as clear as your lessons . Most of them say “Play the same blues scale over all three chords of a 12 bar blues ” Its very misleading .     Thanks
Martin
I can see from your instructional videos that you are a fantastic teacher – one that can truly relate to all ages – humble yet very positive in approach – never coming across as superior and yet so totally capable of demonstrating the principles and techniques that you seek to impart to the students. I have gained so much confidence in my playing from “pouring over” time and again these invaluable lessons. Invaluable not only in musical content, but also in human interaction content. I am absolu… Read more
Ron
Just wanted to send you a quick note to say thank you for being you, your playing, your website and your desire to help others. I’m a professional musician in the US Army and I’ve visited your website almost every day since discovering it a couple of months ago. Your lessons are profound and easy to use. I’ve purchased most of your PDF books and now am starting to delve more into the video and audio lessons.  Thank you for being a great resource!
James
Hey Steve, My name is Jason Freese and I play keyboards and sax in the band Green Day.  I grew up taking sax lessons from Eric Marienthal when I was a kid and got out of it for a long time. I ran into you on youtube while searching for sax stuff. I bought a whole bunch of your lessons and have been loving it! Thanks! Here is my wikipedia so you can see the albums I’ve played on….Thanks again. It’s sparked my interest in practicing again.   Jason
Jason Freese (sax player for Green Day)
By the way, BIG COMPLIMENTS to you, Steve! Not only are you a great player, you are also a great teacher! I, too, am a woodwinds player/teacher. I have new inspiration to play and teach because of you. The concepts and “thinking” is similar to what I already learned in College, but hearing you explain and PLAY the concepts REALLY MAKES THE DIFFERENCE! Also, your written patterns are more interesting than other books I have seen! Keep up the good work. I will be recommending your sit… Read more
I will be recommending your site to others!
I bought Steve’s dominant bebop book and took a couple of online lesson from him. I really appreciated Steve’s careful listening of what I wanted to get done in a lesson and his clear, concise ideas on next steps to improve my playing and musical interpretation.  His mastering  the Dominant Bebop Scale has lots of exercises to use a scale that addresses the largest percentage of chords I come across in pop/blues music. The dominant V7.  Needless say it has improved my playing.  I teach and a… Read more
Keith

Hello Steve,

I have not received my alto yet but have already gone through 14 lessons. I love your approach, style, knowledge and competence. I now regret so much to have stayed away from playing the sax for the past 45-50 years…(I am 65).  But It is never too late to get back to your first love. After 23 years in compuer sciences and 22 years in finances…I am now back to music for the rest of my life.

Doing some research on the net, I found this:

http://forum.saxontheweb.net/showthread.php?1… Read more

Claude
I want to say something about Steve Neff’s series of lessons, Beginner Jazz Improvisation. For a couple of years I tried many beginner lessons and my problem was that there was a gap between lessons that were fairly simple and ones that I was not quite ready for and my progress stalled out. That problem was solved with the series Beginner Jazz Improvisation. He guides you step by step along the way and builds a foundation for learning jazz and blues. He leaves no question about what to practice … Read more
Pete
I’m an experienced player in the pop/soul/funk areas of music and, previously, classical.  Over the decades I’ve been playing, I’ve always felt that I could do what I needed in those styles of music.  However, recently I began to feel limited by my use of the same old licks. When I discovered Steve Neff’s website, and heard the audio examples based on the exercises in his books, I realized they were what I needed.  I purchased all of them and have been working on them since.  It’s very hard work… Read more
Paul
Thank you for all the educational information you provide.  I am a classically trained musician.  Professionally, I am a 4th and 5th grade band teacher.  I have played piano and sax for many years, but now I am starting to gig out more. I have always improvised by ear in the past. I have gotten by with my strong sense of pitch, rhythm and melodic contour. However, I want to go deeper. I want to play with a greater variety of melodic and rhythmic ideas to pull from.  I have studied to gain a … Read more
Ray

Hi Steve,

First, I want to thank you for all of your great lessons. They are like a “For Dummies” version of all the books on my shelf. The lessons break things down into manageable pieces, and give me the confidence that I’m practicing the right pieces. I’m starting to make progress.   Thank You,   Kim

Kim

Love your lessons!  I have been using your lesson packages for many months now, and am learning a lot.  It is so perfect for me with a very busy adult schedule and difficulty in taking jazz/improv music lessons from reputable instructors who live and hour or more away from me.

Lenore

I am enjoying your style of teaching, and you’ve done a great job with the videos….good sound quality and well constructed lessons.  Balances the more guitaristic material found on the majority of guitar based programs.  Jazz vocab is what I’m all about at this point in the journey.  I especially dig the fact that you’ve studied with Bergonzi…helps me see his voluminous output in a more bite sized way.

Milton

Steve,

I have played for many years and have enjoyed going “back to the basics” in some of your lessons!  You have such a gift for explaining concepts.  As I have gotten older, some of the basic things have gotten muddled because I just play, not knowing why.  As I refresh myself with “why”, it increases my confidence and expands my playing.  Thank you so much for using your gift!  You are a blessing!

Julia
It is so refreshing to have a great player, who can provide lessons and examples in a manner which is understandable to most any enthusiastic saxophonist who is ready to improve. not just the, do this, do that, memorize this, memorize that… while all that is absolutely necessary, you go on to give reasons and examples to explain and validate why you have to do all of these things, the benefits, if you will… that is the key for me, you tell, explain, demonstrate, explain some more, you give perso… Read more
Cedric
I’ve been having ‘ online’  lessons with Steve for a few months now. Being a teacher myself I had had some reservations with the idea at first and the practicalities of it .  Let me just say that my playing has taken a huge leaps forward while studying with Steve and continues to do so.Steve studied with some renowned player/teachers such as Bergonzi and Garzone– this in itself is invaluable but Steve teaches from his own books, which cover a a vast amount of  jazz language. Steve h… Read more
David
First, I’m really excited about your materials! This site is a vast resource for any aspiring (and maybe already inspired) jazz musicians. I’m not a sax player, I play mandolin and fiddle, but have been learning jazz and playing weekly with a quintet for the past 6 months and have been struggling with all of the issues you get into in your lessons. I bought several books and lessons and plan to continue with some others as soon as I organize my practice routine. Thanks again for a great site … Read more
Tony Galfano

Thank You Steve. I think that I will be busy for years. Thank You for your great contribution to jazz music. Your books, more than teaching “how to play jazz”, actually teach “how to speak jazz”. I wish I found your methods years ago.  

Jean-Eric
I am enjoying your style of teaching, and you’ve done a great job with the videos….good sound quality and well constructed lessons.  Balances the more guitaristic material found on the majority of guitar based programs.  Jazz vocab is what I’m all about at this point in the journey.   I especially dig the fact that you’ve studied with Bergonzi…helps me see his voluminous output in a more  bite sized way.
Milton

Featured Video Lessons

  • Mastering the Dominant Pentatonic Sound over a Blues (Digital PDF Book) Mastering the Dominant Pentatonic Sound over a Blues (Digital PDF Book)
    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $19.99 Original price was: $19.99.$14.99Current price is: $14.99.
  • The Secret to Modern Outside Jazz Lines Lesson-Minor The Secret to Modern Outside Jazz Lines Lesson-Minor $9.99
  • Creating Modern II-V-I Lines with Simple Pentatonics Lesson Creating Modern II-V-I Lines with Simple Pentatonics Lesson
    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $9.99
  • The Best Embouchure for Tone, Intonation and Endurance Lesson The Best Embouchure for Tone, Intonation and Endurance Lesson
    Rated 4.91 out of 5
    $9.99
  • The Secret to Altissimo (no one has ever told you about before) Lesson The Secret to Altissimo (no one has ever told you about before) Lesson
    Rated 4.75 out of 5
    $9.99

Now over 600 video and audio lessons to choose from!

Free Lessons

  • Free Lesson on The New Ultimate II-V-I Primer-Major Keys
  • Free Video Lesson on Mastering Altered Pentatonics
  • Free Video Lesson on Mastering the Blues Scale Volume 1 & 2
  • Free Video Lesson on Mastering the Dominant Bebop Scale and Language Book 1 & 2
  • Free Video Lesson on Approach Note Velocity Book

Recent reviews

  • Bebop Scale-Altered Scale II-V-I Practice Lesson Bebop Scale-Altered Scale II-V-I Practice Lesson by Noah
  • Mastering the Dominant Pentatonic Sound over a Blues (Digital PDF Book) Mastering the Dominant Pentatonic Sound over a Blues (Digital PDF Book) by Andy
  • Mastering the Dominant Pentatonic Sound over a Blues (Digital PDF Book) Mastering the Dominant Pentatonic Sound over a Blues (Digital PDF Book)
    Rated 5 out of 5
    by Russ
  • Creating Modern II-V-I Lines with Simple Pentatonics Lesson Creating Modern II-V-I Lines with Simple Pentatonics Lesson
    Rated 5 out of 5
    by Timothy
  • The Best Embouchure for Tone, Intonation and Endurance Lesson The Best Embouchure for Tone, Intonation and Endurance Lesson
    Rated 5 out of 5
    by Ray Holland

Footer

Recent Comments

  • Ari on Geller Blackbird Ebonite Tenor Saxophone Mouthpiece Review
  • Peter van Raak on Selmer Jazz Tribute 7* Tenor Saxophone Mouthpiece Review
  • Willem van Gelder on Theo Wanne Lakshmi Gold Tenor Saxophone Mouthpiece Review
  • Predrag on Drake Vintage Resin NY Jazz Tenor Mouthpiece
  • Noel P on Otto Link Super Tone Master Florida V Tenor Saxophone Mouthpiece Review

Top rated products

  • Mastering the Major Bebop Scale & Sound (Digital PDF Book) Mastering the Major Bebop Scale & Sound (Digital PDF Book)
    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $14.99
  • Tune of the Week-Softly as a Morning Sunrise Lesson Tune of the Week-Softly as a Morning Sunrise Lesson
    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $9.99
  • The Style of Dexter Gordon-Lady Bird Lesson 1 The Style of Dexter Gordon-Lady Bird Lesson 1
    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $9.99
  • Tune of the Week-Days of Wine and Roses Lesson Tune of the Week-Days of Wine and Roses Lesson
    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $9.99
  • Tune of the Week-Invitation Tune of the Week-Invitation
    Rated 5.00 out of 5
    $9.99

Product tags

alto sax alto saxophone approach notes audio lesson bebop scale beginner beginner saxophone blues blues licks blues patterns blues scale blues scales diminished scale dominant chords ear training fundamentals II-V-I improvisation jazz improvisation jazz lines jazz patterns jazz sax jazz saxophone jazz standard jazz standards licks Mastering the Blues Scale Michael Brecker modern improv modern improvisation online lesson patterns playing outside practice habits reading music sax basics sax lessons saxophone scales smooth jazz steve neff tenor sax tenor saxophone video lesson video lessons
  • Instagram
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • SUPPORT

Neffmusic © 2005–2025