Trombone Mute
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![]() HARMON 5198 WOW TROMBONE MUTE WITH STEM E MODEL US $59.85
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![]() NEW JO RAL JO RAL Spun Aluminum Trombone Bucket Mute TRB8L US $50.00
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![]() HUMES BERG 163 TROMBONE METAL PIXIE STRAIGHT MUTE US $46.19
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![]() HUMES BERG 160B VELVET TONE TROMBONE BUCKET MUTE US $36.00
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![]() Yamaha Silent Brass System Trombone SB59 Silent Mute Brand New US $148.95
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![]() NEW HUMES BERG 151 TENOR TROMBONE STRAIGHT MUTE US $20.00
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![]() 1 TROMBONE MUTE BACH CUP 1 STRAIGHT MUTE US $4.99
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![]() NEW HUMES BERG 170 BASS TROMBONE STRAIGHT MUTE US $29.75
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![]() HUMES BERG 152 STONELINED TENOR TROMBONE CUP MUTE US $32.00
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![]() HUMES BERG 160A VELVET TONE TROMBONE BUCKET MUTE US $32.90
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![]() Tenor Trombone pianissimo straight mute practice mute US $47.39
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![]() Trombone Mute Straight New US $45.00
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![]() Humes Berg HB151 Tenor Trombone Straight Mute US $42.09
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![]() NEW lightweight aluminum trombone mute US $29.99
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![]() HUMES BERG 172D VELVET TONE TROMBONE BUCKET MUTE US $34.95
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![]() HUMES BERG 126A SYMPHONIC STRAIGHT ALUM TROMBONE MUTE US $41.00
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![]() HUMES BERG 175C BASS TROMBONE SYMPHONIC STRAIGHT MUTE US $59.00
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![]() JO RAL TRB 8S ALUMINUM TENOR TROMBONE BUCKET MUTE US $79.95
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![]() Yamaha Silent Brass Trombone Mute PM5 US $89.49
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![]() NEW PROFESSIONAL USA TROMBONE MUTE US $39.95
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![]() HUMES BERG 171 STONELINED BASS TROMBONE CUP MUTE US $39.90
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![]() HUMES BERG 172A VELVET TONE TROMBONE BUCKET MUTE US $34.95
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![]() HUMES BERG 198 BASS TROMBONE LGE BORE STRAIGHT MUTE US $39.95
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![]() Humes Berg 152 Trombone Cup Mute US $26.08
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![]() JO RAL TRB 1B BRASS BOTTOM TROMBONE STRAIGHT MUTE US $65.49
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![]() HUMES BERG 153 CLEARTONE TROMBONE MUTE US $39.95
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![]() JO RAL TRB 3 TENOR TROMBONE ALUMINUM BUBBLE MUTE US $74.69
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![]() Trombone Mute Straight New US $34.00
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![]() HUMES BERG 199 BASS TROMBONE CUP MUTE LARGE BORE US $56.00
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![]() HUMES BERG 158 VELVET TONE TROMBONE BUCKET MUTE US $26.25
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![]() trombone mute wood heavy duty giardario brand US $100.00
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![]() HARMON FRENCH LINE 5202 TROMBONE STRAIGHT MUTE G3 US $38.49
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![]() Denis Wick DW5527 Tenor Trombone Practice Mute US $59.20
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![]() HUMES BERG 126C TROMBONE SYMPHONIC STRAIGHT MUTE US $46.50
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![]() NEOTECH MUTE CASE TROMBONE BLACK ITEM5201142 ships freeUSPS FIRST class US $17.99
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![]() HUMES BERG 179 MEL O WAH TENOR TROMBONE MUTE US $29.60
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![]() Conn 88 HTG Greenhoe Trigger Trombone FREE SHIP Plus mute US $4,359.00
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![]() Jo Ral TRB 3 Tenor Trombone Bubble Mute US $135.06
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![]() Manhasset Trombone Mute Cup Holder 1340 US $10.50
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![]() Wallace Scotland Large Bore Trombone Straight Mute US $34.99
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![]() HUMES BERG BASS TROMBONE STRAIGHT MUTE MODEL 198 US $12.99
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The Martinettis Buy a Computer - Apple's Worst Commercial
If anything can match the sexiness of Apple (AAPL) products, its the über cool marketing campaigns that sell them. Created by New York/Los Angeles hipster ad agency TBWAChiatDay, the beautifully-shot commercials, scored by underground indie rock (consequently launching the careers of bands like Jet and Feist), mirror the cutting edge design we've come to expect with Apple gadgetry.
But betwixt that groundbreaking Ridley Scott-directed "1984" commercial and today's finger-on-the-pulse status quo, there was a dark period in Apple advertising. It was in 1995, specifically, that Hawthorne Communications, from advertising hotbed Fairfield, IA, unleashed upon the world another dystopia, far more foreboding than any Orwellian existence. This time, the face on the big screen spouting its ideological rhetoric didn't belong to Big Brother; it belonged to a suburban family of superdorks at the heart of Apple's disaster ad: "The Martinettis Bring Home A Computer dell xps m1330 battery ."
This three-act storymercial that heralded the introduction of the Macintosh Performa spoon-fed its audience the wonders of personal computing with an extra helping of Velveeta. Part of the cringe factor is simply a result of the characters' navieté about this computer "with the future built right in" that, by today's standards, is laughably prehistoric.
But the infomercial obviously can't be blamed for lauding a disk drive, CD-ROM drive or modem as cutting edge. Trotting out Claris Works as innovative word processing software, introducing Apple's online service, eWorld (enabling you to "make friends all over cyberspace"), boasting a CRT monitor with "TV quality" images and literally referring to "multimedia" as "exciting technologies" -- all of those things, while smacking of the "what life was like before television" grandparent effect, are not the ad's fault.
No, the real eyeball stabbing element about the commercial is that it's couched in a sitcom format with a wannabe Wonder Years sentimentality and grating, stereotyped characters. The "wild story," narrated by middle child TJ, the next generation Encyclopedia Britannica kid, follows the Hp pavilion dv9700 battery Martinetti family as they buy their first home computer.
The only family member reticent about the Performa purchase is "Pop," the Martinetti's stick-in-the-mud patriarch. His argument that "the world got along fine for thousands of years without computers" leaves the rest of the clan lovingly shaking their heads under the score of a muted trombone. Even Schubert, the golden retriever, rolls over in chagrin. TJ remarks about his stubborn dad, "If you told him the computer could take you to the moon, he'd want to go three times to make sure."
It's only when live-in Grandpa Carmine (whose onscreen entrance you expect to be followed by a toilet flush sound effect) offers to pay for the Performa that Pop agrees to bring it home. But there's a catch! If after one month, the family could prove the computer's value to Pop, he'd have to reimburse Gramps and the computer wouldn't be returned (back in the day when Macs came with a 30-day money-back guarantee?).
And so the trial of the Martinettis' Macintosh Performa began.
Math-challenged TJ practiced drills on CD-ROM games. Gramps, a classical music lover, joined an online opera lovers forum and recorded little sister Zoe playing her clarinet while she "put pictures and words together!" from a trip to the zoo. And what now feels like a nod to Performa's Jurrasicness, Mom utilized the design software to create a greeting card of a dinosaur in a party hat saying "Have a Groovin B'Day!!!" and faxed a draft to her publisher. She also produced Dell vostro 1510 battery the first-ever Martinetti newsletter.
But it was Pop himself who, despite himself, loosened his vice grip on monotony and, after everyone was asleep, took the Performa for a spin. To his surprise, the computer wasn't just about writing book reports, playing games, "e-mailing" or looking at pictures on the Internet. It actually served the practical needs of adult men. He got stock quotes on eWorld, balanced the family budget and even used dos files from the office.
Spoiler alert: The Martinettis did get to keep the Peforma. TJ's math grades improved, Gramps made a love connection with a fellow opera forum member... and even Schubert got his paws on it. But as TJ put it, "We didn't only get a computer. It got us."
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US $59.85








































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