Saxophones Introduced: Between 1935 and 1937.
Saxophones Discontinued: 1981-1982 (King Marigaux stencil production continued to about 1986). Appx. 27,000 total horns sold.
SOTW SML Forum Archive An archive of the 2nd or 3rd gen of SOTW’s forum.
The Woodwind Forum SML Forum I’m an admin there and post my newest research there first.
SML Articles on SOTW. I wrote a couple.
SML Pages on Saxpics.com The original articles I wrote on saxpics.com several years ago.
Stephen Howard Woodwinds A review of the SML Gold Medal “II” from a repairman’s perspective.
(Vintage) SML Saxophones on Facebook Some good pics and other info.
SML Paris They now just import/export saxophones. They don’t manufacture them.
Saxophone.org Gallery Some horns that were formerly on Saxquest’s website.
SOTW SML Picture Gallery Sax-on-the-Web’s small gallery.
TheSax.Info Gallery My small gallery.
The Vintage Saxophone Gallery This is the direct link to the SML section of Saxpics.com’s Gallery.
Misc. eBay Vids Demos of about 20 or so SML horns on YouTube.
Modern SML saxophones are Taiwanese/Chinese sourced.
The “Rev. A” etc. names are made up by me for convenience, based on feature similarity. A lot of SMLs didn’t have model names. I also consider horns without serial numbers ‘Prototypes.’
Standard models are “last year’s” model with different engraving. For example, if you got a Standard model with a Rev. D serial number on it, it will have all the features of a Rev. C horn.
Rev. A Models
s/n 0 – 45xx (1935? – 1942)

Available Pitches: Straight Bb soprano, Eb alto, Bb tenor
Available Finishes: Silver plate, silver plated body with gold plate highlights, gold plate (probably)
Known Model Names: Alliance, AW2, Modele Standard, Primax, Progresse, Radiotone (probably more)
Le Strama Super (Split-Bell-Key Model)
s/n 1xxx – 45xx (1937 – 1942)

Available Pitches: Eb alto, Bb tenor
Available Finishes: Silver plate, silver plated body with gold plate highlights, gold plate (probably)
Coleman Hawkins Special (Rev. A)
s/n ca. 23xx to 45xx (1938 – 1942)

Available Pitches: Eb alto, Bb tenor
Available Finishes: I’ve only seen examples in silver plate
Coleman Hawkins Special (Rev. B)
s/n 45xx to 67xx (1942 – 1947)

Available Pitches: Eb alto, Bb tenor
Available Finishes: I’ve only seen examples in silver plate
The easiest-to-spot difference between the Rev. A and B is the switch from left-hand bell keys to right-hand.
SML Standard Models
s/n 45xx to 202xx (1942 – 1968)

Available Pitches: I’ve only seen Eb altos & Bb tenors
Available Plating: See each Rev. for finish breakdown
The Standard is essentially “last year’s model” re-engraved.
In other words, a Standard with the serial number of 5xxx (pictured), which would make it a “Rev. B” by my model chart,
actually has all the features of a “Rev. A” model. It’s an interesting marketing gimmick.



Rev. B Models
s/n 45xx to 67xx (1942 – 1948)

Available Pitches: I’ve only seen Eb altos & Bb tenors
Available Finishes: I’ve only seen examples in silver plate
Known Model Names: Alliance, The Duke, Radiotone (probably more)
The easiest-to-spot difference between the Rev. A and B is the switch from left-hand bell keys to right-hand.
Super Series
s/n 45xx to 73xx (1942 – 1949)

Available Pitches: I’ve only seen Eb altos & Bb tenors
Available Finishes: I’ve only seen examples in silver plate, with the exception of the Model 49, which were available in lacquer
Known Model Names: Super 42, Super 43, Super 44, Super 45, Super 46, Super 47, Super 48/Super, Model 49
Note that the Super 42 has the “Rev. B”-style G#/C#/B/Bb cluster.







Rev. C
s/n 73xx to 83xx (1949 – 1951)

Available Pitches: I’ve only seen Eb altos & Bb tenors
Available Finishes: Silver plate, Perma-Gold (a “gold tone” finish), nickel plate, lacquer
Known Model Names: Model 260
The easiest-to-spot difference between the Rev. B and C is the switch to sheet-metal keyguards.
Note that some baritones produced during this time have “Rev. B”-style keyguards.
Rev. D
s/n 83xx to 150xx (1951-1957)

Available Pitches: Straight Bb soprano, Eb alto, Bb tenor, Eb baritone
Available Finishes: Silver plate, Perma-Gold (a “gold tone” finish), nickel plate, lacquer w/nickel keywork (“two-tone”), lacquer
The easiest-to-spot difference between the Rev. C and D is the engraving. A harder-to-spot difference is all the adjustment screws.
Note that some baritones produced during this time have “Rev. B”-style keyguards.
Gold Medal “Mk. I”
s/n 150xx to 20xxx (1957-1967)

Available Pitches: Straight Bb soprano, Eb alto, Bb tenor, Eb baritone
Available Finishes: Silver plate, nickel plate, lacquer w/nickel keywork (“two-tone”), lacquer
Gold Medal “Mk. II”
s/n 20xxx to 27xxx (1967-1981)

Available Pitches: Straight Bb soprano, Eb alto, Bb tenor, Eb baritone
Available Finishes: Silver plate (matte and burnished), nickel plate, lacquer w/nickel keywork (“two-tone”), lacquer
Known Stencil Names: Alexandre, (Reynolds) Contempora, Jen Co Harmonia, King Marigaux, Lucerne, Pichard, Vedette, Woodwind, many more
The easiest to spot difference between the “Mk. I” and “Mk. II” is that the “II” does not have rolled tone holes.
King Marigaux (Gold Medal “Mk. II” Stencil)
s/n 20xxx to 27xxx (1967-1981)

Available Pitches: Straight Bb soprano, Eb alto, Bb tenor, Eb baritone
Available Finishes: Silver plate (matte and burnished), nickel plate, lacquer w/nickel keywork (“two-tone”), lacquer
This stencil is listed seperately because it actually is a bit different from the Gold Medal; later models have an altissimo F#.
These horns may also have been available longer than the Gold Medal; until maybe 1986.
Loose Picture Galleries Around the Web …
DoctorSax
Standard Rev. D Bb Tenor. Lacquer. sn 17519 (1962). 1600×1200 pics.
Rev. D Bb Tenor. Lacquer. sn 9100 (1951). 1600×1200 pics.
Rev. D Bb Tenor. Lacquer. sn 11658 (1955). 1600×1200 pics.
Standard Rev. D Bb Tenor. Lacquer. sn 17519 (1962). 1600×1200 pics.
GetASax
Rev. D Eb alto. Lacquer. sn unknown. 1024×768 pics.
Rev. D Bb tenor. Silver plate. sn 9892 (1953). 1024×768 pics.
Rev. D Eb baritone. Lacquer. sn 10xxx (1953). >1600×1200 pics.
Rev. D Eb alto. Relacquer. sn 11xxx (1955). >1600×1200 pics.
Rev. D Eb alto. Lacquer. sn 11xxx (1955). >1600×1200 pics.
Rev. D Eb alto. Lacquer. sn 12877 (1956). 1024×768 pics.
Rev. D Bb tenor. Lacquer. sn 13561 (1957). >1600×1200 pics.
Gold Medal Mk I Eb alto. Lacquer. sn unknown. 1024×768 pics.
Gold Medal Mk I Bb Tenor. Lacquer. sn 16944 (1961). 1024×768 pics.
Gold Medal Mk I Bb Tenor. Lacquer. sn 17656 (1963). 1024×768 pics.
Gold Medal Mk II King Marigaux stencil Eb alto. Lacquer. sn 20928 (1969). 1024×768 pics.
Gold Medal Mk II Lucerne stencil Bb tenor. Lacquer. sn 21323 (1970). >1600×1200 pics.
Gold Medal Mk II Lucerne stencil Eb alto. Lacquer. sn 21625 (1971). >1600×1200 pics.
Gold Medal Mk II King Marigaux stencil Eb alto. Lacquer. sn 23116 (1973). 1024×768 pics.
USAHorn
Rev. D Bb tenor. Lacquer. sn 92xx (1952). >1600×1200 pics.
Rev. D Bb tenor. Lacquer. sn 146xx (1957). >1600×1200 pics.
Rev D Woodwind stencil Eb alto. Lacquer. sn 150xx (1957). >1600×1200 pics.
Gold Medal Mk II King Marigaux stencil Bb tenor. Lacquer. sn 203xx (1969). >1600×1200 pics.
Misc.
Slideshow Gallery
PC/Mac Navigation Help:
- Click the “FS” button for BIG images (heartily recommended).
- Click the “SL” link for an automatic slide show.
- Click the “Info” button for info on the pic, a link to the full gallery and my witty banter.
- Click the left/right arrows or thumbnails to navigate through the pics.
- Click the “thumbs up” button if you liked the pic or my commentary — or both :).
Apple iDevice: click on the “SML” title, then click on a pic.
You might have to do it a couple times.
Is a Lucerne a SML stencil or a Dolnet stencil please ?
While you might hate this answer, it’s the most accurate: if it looks like an SML, it’s an SML. If it looks like a Dolnet, it’s a Dolnet. You can e-mail me pics if you’re not sure. thesaxinfo at gmail.com.