jiminos wrote:
Hey, Richard, I noticed that you wrote you've gotten rid of all your Susatos. May I ask why?
Sorry I missed this question when you posted it!
When I was transitioning out of fluteplaying and into Low Whistles I picked up loads of Susatos because they were locally available (I could try them) and inexpensive.
I had them in almost all the lower keys:
Low C
Low D
Low Eb
Low E
Low F
Mezzo Gb
Mezzo G
Mezzo Ab
Mezzo A
then off the Susatos, for the higher keys
Generation Bb
Generation B
Generation C
Generation C#
Feadog D
Feadog/Generation Franken Eb
When I went on my big Low D Whistle Quest in the 2000s and got a couple dozen different makes of Low D I discovered that I really didn't care for Susatos compared to the alloy Low Ds such as MK, Burke, Overton, Goldie, Lofgren, Reviol, Reyburn, etc.
So when a guy wanted Susatos in all the odd keys I sold him the lot, around a dozen Susatos I had including some styles no longer made like the angled-neck Low D and Low C.
I've always thought Susatos got better as they got lower and Susato Low Ds are very nice players and that keyless angled-neck Susato Low C was a superb whistle.
I only have one Susato left- a Mezzo G, a very early one, the first Susato style machined from brown ABS stock with a wooden block.


My Susatos in 2004. You can see the angled-neck keyless Low D and Low C.
