Skip to the content

Menu
Skip to main content
Collections Menu
Conn 10M Tenor Saxophone Played by Big Jay McNeely
Conn 10M Tenor Saxophone Played by Big Jay McNeely
Conn 10M Tenor Saxophone Played by Big Jay McNeely

Conn 10M Tenor Saxophone Played by Big Jay McNeely

Manufacturer C.G. Conn, Ltd.
Datec. 1937
DimensionsOverall (HWD) (overall): 32 1/2 × 6 1/8 × 10 in. (82.55 × 15.558 × 25.4 cm)
Credit LineMoPOP permanent collection
Object number1998.699.1
Text Entries

Although manufactured in the late 1930s, this Conn 10M tenor saxophone was used mostly in the late 1940s and 1950s by R&B and Rock’n’Roll saxophonist Big Jay McNeely (Cecil James McNeely). With this saxophone he opened for Bill Haley & His Comets, Little Richard, and Nat King Cole, as well as for his own showstopping performances. McNeely favored the saxophone’s large bell and bright sound because it best carried the sharp “shouting” and “honking” style that was popular among saxophone players of the era, a style of which he was a master. It was a versatile instrument too, and with the addition of a smaller reed, he also performed subtler tones for more tender and sultry songs.   

 

After McNeely bought another saxophone—a Selmer Balanced Action—the new sax became his standard while the Conn became his “showpiece.” Initially he painted it in transparent, phosphorescent paint so that during his finales its body would shimmer chartreuse, and the inside of the bell would glow red. For an added effect he would wear white gloves, so that when the lights were turned down, the audience would see only two white hands playing a floating, “supernatural” horn. The orange color that it sports today is from 1983, when McNeely repainted it in these bright colors for a British television show appearance. 

 

McNeely (1927-2018) was key in placing the saxophone as the featured instrument of Rock’n’Roll, before the electric guitar became popular. He had his first hit in 1949, “The Deacon's Hop,” which topped the charts at the time. In 1959 he paired with Blues and Doo-Wop singer, Little Sonny Warner for the ballad hit “There Is Something on Your Mind.”  

Orange saxophone with brass buttons and keys with a white mouthpiece. Interior of bell is painted green. 
CopyrightThe organization that has made the Item available reasonably believes that the Item is not restricted by copyright or related rights, but a conclusive determination could not be made. For more information, see http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NKC/1.0/
On View
Not on view
Fender Stratocaster, 1968: formerly owned by Jimi Hendrix
Jimi Hendrix
Date: 1968
Medium: wood; metal; plastic; paint
Object number: 1992.8.1
Bundy Trumpet known as "Annaloria I," Played by Johnny "Dizzy" Moore
H. & A. Selmer, Inc.
Date: c. 1958
Object number: 1999.466.1.1
Hohner Melodica Piano 26 Played by Augustus Pablo
Hohner
Date: c.1970
Object number: 2000.122.1
Olds Ambassador Trombone Formerly Used by Don Drummond
Don Drummond
Date: c. 1957
Object number: 2000.125.13.A,.B
Gibson ES-355TDC Formerly Owned by Chuck Berry
Chuck Berry
Date: 1973
Medium: ebony; mahogany; maple
Object number: 1996.95.2.1
Bo Diddley Guitar
Gretsch
Date: c. 1960
Medium: maple; mahogany; ebony; chrome; plastic; mother of pearl
Object number: 1998.858.3
Harmony Stratotone Formerly Owned by Carl Perkins
The Harmony Company
Date: c. 1953
Object number: 1999.251.3
TICKETS