





🌿 Elevate your jazz tone with organic precision—because your sound deserves the purest reed.
D'Addario Organic Select Jazz Filed Tenor Saxophone Reeds are premium, chemical-free reeds designed for jazz saxophonists seeking superior projection, clarity, and consistency. Individually sealed for freshness and available in multiple strengths and models, these reeds are crafted in the USA from naturally-grown cane, combining eco-conscious production with professional-grade performance.










J**R
Winning me back from the land of synthetic reeds
I have played saxophone for 39 years and over the course of the last two decades have played almost exclusively synthetic reeds due to the huge expense and enormous inconsistency of cane reeds. I tried these reeds on a whim and was pleasantly surprised. the functionality and consistency of each reed gave me the sound quality I was looking for. Rotating the reeds in the pack has helped to parallel the life span of the pack to roughly equal the value of one synthetic reed at similar price point.
J**Y
Great alternative choice from the standard reeds
I bought these for my son who is currently learning what his favorite reed he would like to use when playing. So far it's these. I've played on them, and they sound great! I do have my own particular choice in reeds, but these are great when i've run out of my choice. My son on the other hand has picked these more than once, and it does have a significant difference in sound and durability compared to the Ricos that he would usually get. So I think these are the ones we'll be purchasing from here on out.
I**R
Totally changed my playing
I never thought a reed would make such a difference.I was playing some old vintage Rico Royals that I had in my case for a long time. Although they played well, I thought it might be time to get new reeds.I bought a variety pack of Vandoren 3s. I used them in the past. But now they just don't work for me. Maybe they were too hard. Regardless, they were just not fun to play. I tried my old Rico Royal 3s and they were better.I got the 2M Select Jazz, and they gave me so much more control.I was going to buy a new mouthpiece, but with these reeds, I have a new playing experience and am happy with my current vintage 1970s Meyer 6M.
T**Y
I really like these reeds.
I've purchased the D'Addario reeds for my clarinet, alto and tenor. Probably my favorite reed for the price.
J**S
Fairly consistent
Fairly uniform on the cuts and quality. I used to use Rico Royals. There are only 5 of these to a box, but I get less reeds in a box that are un-usable, so it’s fine. I was probably only using 6-7 out of a box of 10 of the old brand. I work on my reeds with sandpaper and reed knives, so I generally can get what I want out of reeds, even if they don’t initially play well out of the box.
N**S
Excellent quality
My daughter said these are far superior to her other reeds. She is very pleased with thr sound quality they produce, and the feel.
S**R
Review
My favorite reeds. Super consistent. Excellent tone.
M**Z
so far so good
I haven't played on cane for decades but recently I wanted to see if I could change my tone and because synthetics seem to be getting worse. Synth reeds are really expensive but they can last for along time and they are great for just about anything, which is why I began playing them. Fibracell stopped making the reed that worked best for me. Now I hear from Steve Cole that D'Addario makes a great synthetic; I'll be checking it out too.To really evaluate these cane reeds one needs to play on the whole box, in my opinion. The things that are important are: Can I pick any reed from the box and play on it; does it warp easy; do I have to work it a lot to get it to play; will there be any dead reeds in this pack? I would get a box of LaVoz med hard and work those down to med soft. D'Addario has filed these reeds already so one might just need to seal one or all of them.So far, these seem to be good reeds. The 3 med, seem to be a solid medium. Back in the day, 3 meant medium but now you have 3 soft, med, and hard and I don't have any idea how that works. And the problem is reeds are expensive and nobody wants to by $150 dollars worth of reeds just to find the right strength. D'Addario I hear has a strength chart that should help you out.Again I would have to play on every reed in the pack to really be able to give a qualified review but I can't do that right now. All I can say is They look and feel and play like a quality reed and even though they are filed you can still work them if you know what you're doing. I haven't had one warp on me yet and I hope I never do. we'll see
Trustpilot
4 days ago
1 week ago