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back. back. back.Thomann is the largest online and mail order retailer for musical instruments, light and sound equipment worldwide, having about 10m customers in 120 countries and 80,000 products on offer.
We are musicians ourselves and share your passion for making it. As a company, we have a single objective: making you, our customer, happy.We have a wide variety of pages giving information and enabling you to contact us before and after your purchase. Alternatively, please feel free to use our accounts on social media such as Facebook or Twitter to get in touch.Most members of our service staff are musicians themselves, which puts them in the perfect position to help you with everything from your choice of instruments to maintenance and repair issues.Our expert departments and workshops allow us to offer you professional advice and rapid maintenance and repair services.
This also affects the price - to our customers' benefit, of course.Apart from the shop, you can discover a wide variety of additional things - forums, apps, blogs, and much more. Always with customised added value for musicians.
If you would like to learn more about Rampone Cazzani saxophones, please feel free to give us a call at 212-683-2985 or email us at [email protected]. More info on this bare brass Rampone Cazzani tenor sax will be posted shortly. All our new Rampone Cazzani saxophones come with a Marco Magi deluxe case.
![Rampone and cazzani saxophones Rampone and cazzani saxophones](http://test.woodwind.org/clarinet/BBoard/download.html/1,4298/Aflat.jpg)
![Cazzani Cazzani](http://www.ramponecazzani.com/eng/reflect2.php?img=../images/altri_strumenti/2059.jpg)
A descendant, Agostino Rampone, in the second half of the 1800, was flutist at “La Scala” in Milan; technical and innovator, he perfected the Bohem system on the flute and he met Adolph Sax and built for him some early prototypes to study the mechanics of the saxophone keys. In the early 1900 a Rampone descendant and a lady Cazzani, daughter of a Milanese manufacturer of brass musical instruments, gave birth to the 'Rampone & Cazzani'. In half of the 1900 the company went bankrupt and was taken over by the current owners.