In this image of a horse-drawn funeral hearse, look at the hands of the driver – he’s wearing black leather gloves. On the hands of a funeral director or hearse driver, these gloves had to be pristine and they didn’t last long. They had to do service in all weathers and then, of course, there was all that heavy lifting involved. What do you do with all of these gloves that you’re paying for and constantly wearing out?
Solution: sell them to people who need very small pieces of leather: sell them to musical instrument makers, who used them to line the pads of their woodwinds. Now, of course, white pads are the standard, but if you see an instrument from the 19th or early 20th century in original condition, you’ll know where those black key pads came from.
In the modern day, with instruments such as the saxophone being built in black plastic, there’s a new desire for black pads and they’ve come back
One instrument maker will even supply you with blue pads for your instrument
There’s no difference in sound with the change in colour, but there is a greater cool factor, as there is with anything in complete black!
More Society
- Manchester Camerata to Host the UK’s First Centre of Excellence for Music and Dementia "It's really changed how we view music and what it can do for people"
- Opéra-Comique at Salle Favart Discover the history and tragic fire of the official Théâtre de l'Opéra-Comique
- Cello Lament for The Sycamore Gap Tree Italian cellist and composer Riccardo Pes’ “Lament for the Tree”
- The Gürzenich in Cologne Learn about some famous premieres here